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US sanctions Cuban mining and military conglomerate

The United States imposed financial sanctions on Thursday on a conglomerate of businesses run by the?Cuban military and a joint venture between Cubans and Canadians in the mining industry. This comes as the Trump Administration intensifies its pressure on Cuba's communist leadership by targeting foreign investment sources.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, has commented on the January military raid that was conducted to capture the leader of Venezuela's longtime ally Cuba.

Cuba is next" and blocked most oil deliveries to the country. This worsened power outages in the island.

Trump signed an executive directive last week that broadened U.S. Sanctions against Cuba. President Miguel Diaz-Canel called the move "coercive."

According to?that order?, Secretary of state Marco Rubio stated that the Trump administration targeted Grupo de Administration Empresarial SA (GAESA), a military conglomerate which?U.S. Officials claim that Ania Guiillermina Morera, the Executive President of GAESA, controls at least 40 percent of Cuba's economic output.

In a statement Rubio accused Cuba of allowing intelligence operations by nations hostile to the U.S.

Sherritt announced on its website Thursday that, with immediate effect, it has suspended its direct involvement in joint ventures in Cuba.

The U.S. demanded that Cuba open up its state-run economic system, pay compensation for expropriated properties by the former government of Fidel Castro, and hold "free" and fair elections.

Cuba has said that its socialist form of government is not negotiable. Cuban top officials have accused Washington of "hints at a possible military action" in order to "liberate Cuba" and claim that decades of U.S. economic and social sanctions against the island's government is what has caused its current economic and social problems.

Rubio held talks earlier this week with military officials at the U.S. Southern Command, which oversees U.S. activities in the Caribbean. He was pictured shaking hands with the commander of its Southern Command,?General Frank Donovan. They were standing in front of a map Cuba.

Rubio stated on X that "Today's sanction shows that the Trump Administration will not sit back while Cuba's Communist regime threatens national security in our Hemisphere." "We will keep taking action until the regime makes all the necessary political and economic reforms," Rubio said on X.

The sanctions were announced shortly after Rubio met with Pope Leo at the Vatican, who expressed concern about the rising tensions in the U.S.-Cuba relationship and called for dialogue. (Reporting and editing by Michelle Nichols; Paul Simao, Cynthia Osterman, Michelle Nichols; Daphne Psaledakis; and Ismail Shakil).

(source: Reuters)