U. S. Gathers Anti-Cuban Friends!!
Thirty-eight-year-old Nayib Bukele has been the President of El Salvador since June 1, 2019. His presidency parallels the all-out effort of the Trump administration's fervent desire to finally overthrow Cuba's revolutionary government in the last year of Trump's current term. President Bukele this weekend -- on November 2nd, 2019 -- bowed fully to U. S. pressure to join the Trump quest to execute its regime-change in Cuba as soon the regime-change in Venezuela is finished. On Nov. 2-2019 President Bukele ordered Venezuelan diplomats to leave San Salvador within 48 hours to make way for diplomats named by Venezuela's U.S.-backed opposition leader Juan Guaido who has expected since January that he would succeed President Nicolas Maduro.
U. S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, shown here shaking new El Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele's hand, has thrown the State Department's anti-Cuban crusade 100% into the hands of about twenty Counter Revolutionary zealots led by Marco Rubio and Mauricio Claver-Carone. As long as Trump is President, the U. S. will have unlimited resources as well as political ploys to persuade new leaders like Bukele to join the anti-Cuban and anti-Venezuelan camps. For example, last week the U. S. told Bukele the U. S. extended temporary protections for Salvadorans living in the United States. As the world's economic and military Superpower, the U. S. has vast assets to get small nations like El Salvador to help the daily effort to overthrow the Cuban Revolution, yet it hasn't happened since January 1, 1959. Pompeo, on behalf of Rubio and Claver-Carone, corralled Bukele as a new recruit.
Newly elected, Nayib Bukele will now be El Salvador's anti-Cuban President until at least 2024, with others like him in the wings if Miami needs them. During his tenure, Bukele seems to believe that the Little Havana extremists in Miami will again soon control Cuba with oil-rich Venezuela as a bonus "based on the way the tea leaves are tilting now."
Now a Little Havana asset, President Bukele.
Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido knows who to call when he needs help and resources.
In Miami or Washington, Marco Rubio's phones are treasure troves for new recruits joining the anti-Cuban bandwagon, and Rubio now virtually controls unlimited U. S. government assets at his fingertips as long Trump is President.
In Miami, Rubio cohorts such as Mario and Lincoln Diaz-Balart have for decades dreamed of using their wealth along their political connections -- such as Republican Presidents -- to fulfill their father Rafael's dream of recapturing Cuba. Rafael Diaz-Balart was a powerful Minister in the infamous Batista Dictatorship in Cuba. After the triumph of the Cuban Revolution on January 1, 1959, Rafael became one of the most richest and most powerful Counter Revolutionaries in Miami, and, in fact, Rafael in 1959 created The White Rose, the first anti-Castro paramilitary group in South Florida. Generation to generation, Counter Revolutionary Cubans, as epitomized now by the omnipotent Diaz-Balart brothers, have expected to recapture Cuba "any day now!!" But, it hasn't happened and this is the first week of November in the year 2019. From the 1950s, Cuba has personified the world's David facing Goliath. Generations of families from Cuba to the United States like the Diaz-Balarts detest to that fact.
Key Batista Minister Rafael Diaz-Balart.
An armed Rafael Diaz-Balart at a political rally for Batista in 1958. Diaz-Balart is shown been flanked by the notorious Masferrer brothers who are known to history as the leaders of the Masferrer Tigers, Batista's feared and bloody enforcement army.
One of Florida's richest Counter Revolutionary families, the Diaz-Balarts are shown here with all of the four sons flanking Rafael. Of course, in somewhat of a Cuban Revolution anomaly, many rich Cubans in Batista's Cuba were astonished how easily they got much richer as new millionaires and billionaires as exiles in Miami, almost like gifts from Fidel Castro even as he fervently prevented them overthrowing his beloved Cuban Revolution. Once law school classmates, the saga between Rafael Diaz-Balart and Fidel Castro chronicles much of framed what U.S.-Cuba relations to this day.