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Trump's and Rubio's escalating rhetoric show a Cuban invasion could be imminent

· Axios

President Trump is increasing pressure on Cuba's government, elevating concerns that his continued threats to invade the Caribbean island could become reality. Why it matters: A U.S. invasion of Cuba would mark the most dramatic confrontation between Washington and Havana since the 1962 missile crisis — and the boldest test yet of Trump's campaign to expand America's influence in the Western Hemisphere under his version of the Monroe Doctrine . State of play: U.S. surveillance and reconnaissance flights have surged off Cuba's coast since February, according to a CNN review of flight data published this week. The U.S. imposed additional sanctions on Havana last Thursday, prompting the country's foreign minister to describe the measures as a "collective punishment of a genocidal nature." The island is also facing a worsening humanitarian crisis that Cuban officials have blamed on a U.S. "energy blockade," which prevents oil suppliers from serving the island. And the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro further deteriorated local conditions by cutting Cuba off from a key oil supplier. Between the lines: There are no definitive signs Trump will target Cuba next. Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva told reporters last Thursday that Trump told him privately during a closed-door White House meeting that he has no intention of invading Cuba. Yes, but: Trump has repeatedly expressed interest in a military operation in Cuba, suggesting Friday that an aircraft carrier returning to the U.S. from Iran could be stationed offshore. He said the carrier could "come in, stop about 100 yards offshore, and they'll say: 'Thank you very much. We give up.'" Zoom in: Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the son of Cuban immigrants, told reporters last week that the country's economic system doesn't work and can't be fixed. "And the reason that they can't fix it is not just because they're communist. That's bad enough," he said o...