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American-Cuban expert: Regime change in Cuba would be complicated by its monolithic power structure

American-Cuban expert: Regime change in Cuba would be complicated by its monolithic power structure

From Le Temps · () French

Translated from French, summarized and contextualized by DistantNews.

At a glance

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  • Lisandro Pérez, an American-Cuban expert, believes regime change in Cuba would be difficult due to its monolithic power structure, contrasting it with Venezuela.
  • He notes escalating U.S. pressure on Cuba, including accusations of supporting terrorism and spreading communism, alongside military deployments.
  • Pérez, who emigrated from Havana, is a professor at John Jay College and a specialist in Cuban affairs.

Lisandro Pérez, an American-Cuban academic, assesses that achieving regime change in Cuba presents significant challenges, primarily due to the island's more unified and monolithic power structure compared to Venezuela. His insights come amid intensifying U.S. pressure on Cuba, which Washington frames as a threat to its security.

Washington has labeled Cuba an "extraordinary threat," accusing it of backing terrorism, harboring enemy intelligence services, and promoting communism regionally. These accusations have been accompanied by concrete actions, such as the deployment of the aircraft carrier Nimitz to the Caribbean and the indictment of former Cuban President Raúl Castro. The indictment relates to the 1996 downing of civilian aircraft near Cuban shores, which resulted in American deaths.

Pérez, who was born in Havana and moved to the United States with his family in 1960, possesses a deep understanding of the complex U.S.-Cuba dynamic. He currently serves as a professor at John Jay College in New York, where he specializes in Cuban affairs and related issues.

DistantNews Editorial

Originally published by Le Temps in French. Translated, summarized, and contextualized by our editorial team with added local perspective. Read our editorial standards.