The U.S. President said he would cancel the entire agreement established by the previous government

The U.S. President said he would cancel the entire agreement established by the previous government

U.S. President Donald Trump announced this Friday in Miami that he will change the policy toward Cuba adopted by his predecessor, Barack Obama, just over a year and a half ago.

Clothed by the most rancid Florida right the U.S. President said he would cancel the entire agreement established by the previous government, and signed a document that reverses the progress made between Havana and Washington in the diplomatic approach.

Trump launched a series of outrageous conditions to achieve what he described as a new pact with the Cuban government. Trump gave a very aggressive speech and a backward and out-of-context rhetoric, where he asserted that the liberation of trade and travel to Cuba did not help the people, but enrich the government.

The American President clarified he would not close the Embassy in Havana, and said he would respect the Cuban sovereignty, but advanced a reinforcement of the blockade, a policy he will defend in the international arena.

Cold War Rhetoric

In his speech, Trump launched a series of outrageous conditions to achieve what he described as a new pact with the Cuban government.

The dignitary called into question the future of bilateral relations, whose march considered as a concession of the Obama Administration without receiving anything in return.

In front of an audience made of the most recalcitrant of Miami’s right, Trump claimed to be proud of the members of the mercenary Brigade defeated at Bay of Pigs 56 years ago, and highlighted the role of his friends Marco Rubio and Mario Diaz Balart.

Precisely Trump gave Rubio the document signed to reverse the policy towards Cuba, in a gesture many consider as a reward to the senator who most influenced to muddy relations between Havana and Washington.