Miami Fake Specials
A new installment of the television program “Miami Fake,” produced by Cubainformación, once again focuses on the media and psychological warfare against Cuba, orchestrated by “Cuban-themed” media outlets funded by the White House, mostly based in Miami, but also in Madrid and other parts of the world. These are mercenary media outlets, aligned with the United States government’s policy of economic blockade, strangulation, interference, and regime change.
This program analyzes several recurring themes in recent anti-Cuban propaganda: the normalization (and propaganda) of a possible naval blockade, the narrative of “imminent collapse,” the manipulation of energy supplies from Mexico, the false “technical solutions” impossible under the blockade, Trump’s hypocrisy regarding the deportation of Cubans, and, finally, the repressive cynicism of Miami police authorities speaking about Cuba.
1. They cheer on the naval blockade of Cuba, a prelude to genocide. Anti-Cuban media take another step in legitimizing collective punishment, presenting what would be an act of war against the civilian population as a “political option.”
Cubanos por el Mundo (Cubans Around the World) headlines “U.S. evaluates a naval blockade to cut off oil to Cuba amid strong pressure against the regime,” and explains, without hesitation, whether it is a naval blockade to “fight repression.” In its article, the newspaper states that “without oil, the regime cannot sustain electricity generation, transportation, or its repressive apparatus,” and goes so far as to justify that “cutting it off is equivalent to cutting off its oxygen.”
The publication openly adopts the logic of strangulation: it defends “the blockade, the sanctions, and now a naval blockade” while maintaining that “Cuba is a failure,” blaming the country for the consequences of a criminal policy. It even acknowledges debates “about the humanitarian impact,” but concludes that “the humanitarian catastrophe already exists” and that it is not a consequence of external sanctions, but rather of a “failed model.”
Along the same lines, Cubanos por el Mundo reports that the Cuban Anticommunist Foundation is asking the U.S. to take measures against Castroism and its transnational repressive projection, urging it to “drastically restrict commercial and charter flights, remittances, shipments, and logistical services.” In other words, more blockade, more punishment for the Cuban people, and more pressure to provoke social collapse.
2 The Message of Cuba’s “Imminent Collapse”: Psychological Warfare
The narrative of immediate collapse is repeated like a mantra, seeking to generate despair and demobilization.
Asere Noticias reports that Trump claims Cuba’s “collapse” is very near, cynically suggesting that the fall would not come from direct US action, but from the weakening of the island’s energy allies, especially Venezuela and Mexico. This is a way of concealing the central role of the US embargo in this “weakness.”
Diario de Cuba publishes “Havana Without Venezuelan Oil: Public Transportation in Critical State and Rising Prices,” while 14ymedio asserts that “Gasoline is on the verge of disappearing in Cuba, even on the black market,” reinforcing the narrative of an unviable country.
In another article, Diario de Cuba runs the headline “Cuba on the brink: blackouts, social discontent, and maximum tension in the face of Washington’s offensive,” describing “prolonged blackouts, unbearable heat, food shortages, and a widespread feeling of abandonment,” amplifying actions by groups like UNPACU and venturing alarmist figures: a “27% drop in GDP,” a “60% increase in food prices,” and a “75% increase in transportation costs.”
The publication itself acknowledges that Havana presents these difficulties as a result of Washington, but labels it “external victimization,” deliberately avoiding the real and documented impact of the blockade.
3. The end of Mexican oil?
The propaganda now focuses on fueling the idea of total isolation.
Asere Noticias reports that “Mexico halts oil shipment to Cuba: Sheinbaum denies US influence,” while 14ymedio highlights that “The 700,000 barrels of the tanker ‘Swift Galaxy’ destined for Cuba will ultimately go to Denmark.”
ADN Cuba goes further, stating that “Mexico halts shipment of oil to Cuba, according to Bloomberg,” explicitly suggesting that “pressure from Washington might be working.”
The culmination of this delusion comes with Cubanos por el Mundo (Cubans Around the World), which quotes the far-right media agitator Otaola in “Otaola after the suspension of Mexican oil shipments to Cuba: ‘Collapse is just around the corner,’” where he celebrates the total suffocation: “Imagine the combination of not a single drop of oil (…) the handouts are over (…) combine that with the reality of a people who can’t endure another lie (…) collapse is just around the corner.”
4. The imposter Jorge Piñón and the “solution to the fuel shortage” impossible due to the US embargo. Diario de Cuba presents University of Texas researcher Jorge Piñón as an expert in “The solution to the fuel shortage in Cuba would be just around the corner.” A fallacy he knows is impossible, since it is incompatible with the existing US embargo.
According to Piñón, the US could “grant a license to oil companies to sell fuel to CUPET,” concealing the fact that the embargo prohibits precisely these operations. Moreover, Piñón himself emphasizes that he has advocated “for the future privatization of the Cuban oil sector,” where “the government will have privatized all oil assets” and US laws will be modified to allow the entry of American companies. The conclusion: the agreement with the enemy consists of surrendering, capitulating, and accepting being a colony. That is to say, not a solution, but a political condition of surrender and economic recolonization.
5 Cuban Trump supporters deported by their beloved leader
La Nación publishes “He is Cuban and a loyal pro-Trump podcaster from Florida, but he is in immigration limbo and may be deported,” showing the indifference of Trumpism toward its own followers.
Asere Noticias reports how “El Chulo defends himself against ICE accusations: he denies being in a gang,” while Diario de Cuba reports on “Homicide: the autopsy reveals the cause of death of a Cuban migrant in US custody.”
Regarding the death of Geraldo Lunas Campos, the media outlet reproduces the official version: that he “violently resisted,” that he “attempted suicide,” and that “he stopped breathing during the struggle.” But it also quotes an independent forensic pathologist, who points out that “a homicide ruling does not imply intent to kill, but rather that the death was caused by another person.”
6. Miami Police Chief Speaks About Cuba
The height of cynicism is reached when repressive US authorities pontificate about rights and freedoms.
CubaNet headlines “In Cuba there are police officers who know in their hearts that what they are doing is wrong”: Miami Police Chief, who compares the Cuban system with “open societies like Miami” and claims that “in Cuba the police are there to control and intimidate,” while in Miami “it is not necessary to sow fear to maintain order.”
A discourse that ignores police brutality, structural racism, and daily repression in the US, and that fits perfectly into the narrative of ideological warfare against Cuba.
This new program of “Miami Fake” dismantles, once again, the media machinery of hate, which does not inform: it operates, does not analyze: it punishes, and does not seek the well-being of the Cuban people, but their surrender through hunger, blackouts and despair.
[ SOURCE: cubainformacion.tv ]
