PRELUDE TO WAR? U.S. Spy Planes Swarm Cuba
The President's Daily Brief
0:01 The Pentagon is suddenly paying a lot more attention to Cuba.
0:05 Public flight data now shows American spy planes
0:07 and reconnaissance drones operating unusually close to the island.
0:11 And intelligence analysts say that pattern mirrors what
0:15 we saw before operations involving Venezuela and Iran.
0:19 We'll have the details.
0:21 Just about something unusual is happening just off the coast of Cuba.
0:31 Over the past several weeks,
0:32 US military reconnaissance flights have surged around the island
0:36 in a way that we haven't seen publicly before.
0:39 And the aircraft involved are not your average patrol planes.
0:42 These are some of America's premier surveillance and intel gathering platforms.
0:47 the same kind of assets the Pentagon
0:49 used ahead of operations involving Venezuela and Iran.
0:53 According to a new CNN analysis of publicly available flight tracking data,
0:57 the US Navy and Air Force have conducted at least
1:00 25 intelligence gathering flights near Cuba since early February.
1:05 Most of those missions were concentrated around Havana and Santiago de Cuba.
1:10 Those are the country's two largest cities with some
1:12 aircraft reportedly flying within roughly 40 miles of the coastline.
1:17 Now officially the Pentagon is staying quiet as you might imagine.
1:20 No public explanation, no confirmation of course of any specific operation,
1:25 but the pattern of activity is garnering attention.
1:29 The flights began increasing around the same time that President
1:31 Trump started significantly escalating his rhetoric toward the Cuban government.
1:36 Just weeks before the surge in flights,
1:38 Trump reposted a message on Truth Social suggesting that he
1:41 would visit a quote free Havana before leaving office.
1:45 Soon after that, the administration imposed
1:47 the ongoing oil blockade on Cuba and expanded
1:50 sanctions while increasingly describing the communistr run
1:54 government as a threat to US national security.
1:57 And now, well, now the skies around
1:59 Cuba are getting crowded with American surveillance aircraft.
2:03 Among the planes reportedly operating near
2:04 the island are P8A Poseidon reconnaissance aircraft.
2:08 Those are advanced Navy surveillance planes designed for maritime patrol,
2:13 anti-ubmarine warfare, and intelligence collection.
2:17 They're heavily used in places like the South China Sea and the Persian Gulf,
2:21 where the US monitors adversaries and tracks military activity.
2:25 Also spotted near Cuba were RC135V Rivet joint aircraft.
2:30 Now, these aircraft specialize in vacuuming up electronic emissions,
2:35 radio traffic, radar signals,
2:37 communications, chatter, basically signals intelligence.
2:40 The US has also reportedly deployed MQ4C Triton drones near the island.
2:45 Those are high altitude reconnaissance drones capable
2:48 of conducting long duration surveillance missions over significant areas.
2:53 Now, it's worth noting that very similar patterns emerged
2:56 before previous US military operations involving Venezuela and Iran.
3:01 Back in 2025, publicly visible
3:04 surveillance flights began increasing near Venezuela
3:07 shortly before US special operations forces
3:10 ultimately captured Nicholas Maduro in Caracus.
3:13 Likewise, ahead of the joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran,
3:16 there was a major increase in publicly
3:18 trackable surveillance activity along Iran's coastline,
3:22 particularly the southern coastline,
3:24 including flights involving the very same platforms now appearing around Cuba.
3:29 Now, to be clear, it doesn't mean that military action against Cuba is imminent.
3:33 There's no evidence at this point that the US is
3:36 preparing for an invasion or some kind of immediate strike campaign.
3:40 But intel collection is often the first
3:42 phase of course of any serious operation.
3:44 Whether that's an operation tied
3:46 to sanctions enforcement or maritime interdictions,
3:49 cyber operations, or contingency planning behind the scenes for military action.
3:54 There's another detail here that intelligence
3:56 analysts are paying close attention to.
3:59 Most of these aircraft appear to be flying
4:01 openly with their transponders broadcasting publicly visible location data.
4:07 Now, technically, many of these platforms are capable
4:09 of masking their presence or turning off those signals entirely.
4:13 But in this case, they largely have not, meaning Cuba can see them,
4:18 journalists can see them, and social media accounts can track them in real time.
4:23 Which raises an obvious question.
4:24 Is the visibility itself part of the message?
4:28 Because in modern geopolitics, messaging does matter.
4:31 Sometimes the point is not merely to gather intelligence.
4:34 It's to make sure your adversary knows that you're gathering intelligence.
4:39 We've seen this type of signaling playbook before
4:41 in the Persian Gulf near Taiwan and around Russia's borders.
4:45 Strategic ambiguity mixed with very public activity.
4:48 And for Havana, well, the optics are likely unsettling.
4:52 For their part, Cuban officials insist that the country poses no
4:55 threat to the US and say they remain open to negotiations.
4:59 At the same time, Cuban leaders have reportedly warned
5:02 that they would wage a prolonged guerilla resistance if attacked.
5:06 So, you ask yourself, where does all this go from here?
5:10 Well, it could be simply an aggressive intelligence collection campaign
5:14 designed to monitor Cuban military activity and apply psychological pressure.
5:18 Or it could be part of a much broader
5:21 strategic effort aimed at tightening economic isolation around the island.
5:25 But historically speaking, when you start seeing large numbers of high-end
5:29 American surveillance assets suddenly appearing near geopolitical flash points,
5:34 it usually means Washington is
5:36 actively reviewing options beyond diplomacy alone.
5:40 All right, coming up next,
5:42 Iran delivers a sweeping list of demands to Washington,
5:45 and President Trump's response is now fueling
5:48 fears that diplomacy may be rapidly unraveling, if in fact it was ever raveled.
5:54 I'll be right back.
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8:12 Welcome back to the afternoon bulletin.
8:14 The diplomatic mood surrounding Iran appears to have
8:17 shifted sharply now after President Trump flatly
8:20 rejected Thrron's latest proposal to end the ongoing
8:23 conflict and reopen the Straight of Hormuz.
8:26 Trump made clear almost immediately that he was unhappy with Iran's response,
8:30 telling Axios on Sunday, quote, "I don't like their letter.
8:34 it's inappropriate.
8:36 Shortly afterward, the president posted on Truth
8:38 Social calling the Iranian proposal quote totally unacceptable.
8:42 And he spelled that in all caps.
8:43 So, you know, it was totally unacceptable.
8:46 Now, according to Iranian state media,
8:48 Thrron's counterproposal demanded several major concessions from Washington
8:52 before any broader agreement could move forward.
8:55 Among them, an immediate end to the US naval blockade,
8:59 the lifting of sanctions on Iranian oil sales,
9:02 the release of frozen Iranian assets, and guarantees that the war would not
9:06 resume after a ceasefire agreement was signed.
9:09 Mushtra Hami also asked for a pony.
9:13 Iran also reportedly insisted on maintaining
9:15 operational control over the strait of Hormuz,
9:17 something that is likely to be a complete non-starter for the US.
9:22 And notably absent from much of the Republic
9:24 reporting surrounding Iran's proposal were any major nuclear concessions.
9:29 From Washington's perspective, the entire purpose of these negotiations has
9:34 been to pressure Tehran into making meaningful
9:36 compromises on its nuclear program while restoring
9:39 freedom of navigation through the straight of Humuz.
9:42 Instead, Iran appears to be demanding major economic and strategic
9:46 concessions upfront while offering very little to almost nothing in return.
9:51 And one of the most important takeaways here may be what
9:54 this tells us about how the Iranian regime now views the broader conflict.
9:59 There had been a growing assumption within the White
10:01 House anyway that the combination of US strikes,
10:04 Israeli attacks, economic sanctions, and the naval blockade had weakened Techran
10:08 enough to force the regime toward compromise.
10:11 But Iran's latest response suggests something very different.
10:15 As we previously discussed here on the PDB,
10:17 Iranian leaders increasingly appear to believe that they survived
10:21 the conflict from a position of strength, not weakness.
10:24 And that, of course, changes the negotiating dynamic.
10:28 Iranian officials and state media are openly framing the American
10:31 proposal as an attempt to force Iran into surrender.
10:35 One Iranian source reportedly dismissed Trump's outrage entirely,
10:39 saying the negotiating team was not interested in drafting proposals,
10:42 quote, to please Trump.
10:45 At the same time, hardliners in the US
10:47 are already calling for a tougher response.
10:49 Senator Lindsey Graham reacted to the Iranian proposal
10:53 by suggesting Trump should consider renewed military action,
10:56 including potentially reviving Project Freedom.
10:59 You'll remember that that operation was abruptly suspended less than 48
11:03 hours after it began in order to allow negotiations to continue.
11:07 Well, at least that was that was the White House's public story.
11:11 Now, whether those negotiations are in fact
11:13 still alive after this latest exchange, well, that remains unclear.
11:18 Trump didn't specify whether talks would continue or whether military pressure
11:21 would increase or whether the US is considering additional action against Iran.
11:26 But what does seem clear at this stage is that Washington and Tean
11:30 appear much farther apart than many officials had hoped just days ago.
11:35 And with tensions once again rising around the straight of Hamuz,
11:38 global oil markets are already reacting nervously
11:41 with crude prices jumping following Trump's remarks.
11:45 And that, my friends, is the PDB afternoon bulletin for Monday the 11th of May.
11:49 If you have any questions or comments,
11:51 and I hope you do, please reach out to me at pdbtheirsttv.com.
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12:06 I'm Mike Baker and I'll be back tomorrow.
12:08 Until then, stay informed, stay safe, stay cool.
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