Russia vows to help Cuba withstand US 'blackmail and threats'

Buildings and street lights illuminate the night as Cubans this week began to reap the benefits of a recent 100,000 metric ton delivery of Russian oil, a temporary lifeline for the energy-starved nation and the first major shipment of oil to the island since the United States moved to cut off its fuel early this year, in Havana, Cuba, Thursday.

Buildings and street lights illuminate the night as Cubans this week began to reap the benefits of a recent 100,000 metric ton delivery of Russian oil, a temporary lifeline for the energy-starved nation and the first major shipment of oil to the island since the United States moved to cut off its fuel early this year, in Havana, Cuba, Thursday. (Norlys Perez, Reuters)


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MOSCOW — Russia said on Friday that it stood in solidarity with Cuba ​and would continue to provide humanitarian aid to the Communist‑run island republic, rejecting what it described as blackmail and threats from ‌Washington.

President Donald Trump has said he expects to have the honor of "taking Cuba," ⁠although at the same time, Washington ​has been calling for Havana ⁠to open up the economy and allow greater political freedoms.

"Against the ‌backdrop of the targeted ‌and malicious escalation against Cuba, we reaffirm our solidarity with ⁠the Cuban government and the Cuban people," ⁠Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told reporters.

"We reject blackmail and threats in foreign policy, which also applies to Washington's current demonstrative aggressive pressure on Havana with the aim of gross interference in Cuba's internal affairs in order to break Cuban statehood."

Cuba was a ‌close ally of Moscow for decades, from ​the Communist revolution in 1959 that brought Fidel Castro to power until the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. More recently, Russia has supported the island with both financing and material goods.

"Russia and Cuba have a close historical relationship. We have always been on the side of Cuba in its struggle for independence, in its right ​to live by its own rules, develop on its own path and ‌defend its own ‌interests," Zakharova ⁠said.

"We will continue to provide humanitarian assistance to Cuba during this difficult period of artificially fueled confrontation."

The Russian-flagged Anatoly Kolodkin tanker offloaded some 700,000 barrels of Russian Urals crude in late March at Cuba's Matanzas Bay, ‌challenging a U.S. fuel ​blockade. The Trump administration said it allowed ‌the delivery for "humanitarian" reasons.

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