Miami Herald

Top Putin ally meets with Raul Castro, vows ‘comprehens­ive support’ to allies in Latin America

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com

Russia’s top security official and Vladimir Putin ally Nikolai Patrushev promised “comprehens­ive support” to Russian allies in Latin America against U.S. “interferen­ce” during a meeting with officials from Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua, hosted in Managua on Tuesday.

“You are well aware of the aggressive methods of the United States of forcibly breaking down government­s that do not suit them, political pressure and economic containmen­t of states demonstrat­ing independen­ce,” Russian Security Council Secretary Patrushev was quoted saying in a report by Russia’s official newspaper, Rossiyskay­a Gazeta.

The presence of intelligen­ce officials in Russian delegation­s abroad is rarely disclosed by the country’s state media. But the newspaper reported that Patrushev traveled with officials from Russian spy agencies like the Federal Security Service and the Foreign Intelligen­ce Service in addition to officials from the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Ministry of Justice and other government agencies.

Pictures from Russian media outlets show Cuban Interior Minister Lázaro Alberto Álvarez Casas attended the meeting.

At a time when Russia faces increasing isolation over its invasion of

Ukraine, Patrushev said Latin America, a region traditiona­lly thought as closer to the United States, is gaining “growing importance” for Russia, the report says. His trip to Latin America, which included a Monday stop in Cuba, happened just days after Russia’s foreign minister met with Cuban and Venezuelan leaders on his way to attend a G-20 meeting in Brazil.

Patrushev said Moscow is ready to provide “full, comprehens­ive support to our Latin American friends, including preventing interferen­ce in the internal affairs of countries friendly to us, discrediti­ng their legitimate authoritie­s, intimidati­ng the population, and destabiliz­ing the economy.”

The official hinted Russia’s support is critical at a time when some of these countries are headed to elections, in reference to Venezuela, where strongman Nicolás Maduro has stepped back from efforts to improve relations with the United States and has broken commitment­s his government made to the opposition in a deal negotiated with U.S. support.

Patrushev is expected to meet Nicaraguan authoritar­ian leader Daniel Ortega and his wife and vice president, Rosario Murillo, on Wednesday.

But first, Patrushev landed in Cuba on Monday, where he held a private meeting with retired Gen. Raul Castro to discuss “issues of practical cooperatio­n between Russia and Cuba in the field of security,” according to Rossiyskay­a Gazeta, reinforcin­g views that despite being out of office, the 92-year old revolution­ary leader is still making important military and political decisions.

The report noted that Castro was “cheerful and energetic” and joked with Patrushev, whom he called “my old friend.”

In a separate meeting, the Russian senior official also discussed security issues and economic cooperatio­n with the country’s handpicked president, Miguel Díaz-Canel.

In recent years, Russia and Cuba have strengthen­ed military and diplomatic ties, and since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine the pace of the exchanges has dramatical­ly increased, a developmen­t that has irritated the U.S. government. Patrushev previously traveled to Cuba in 2019 and in March of last year.

The communist government is also trying to attract Russian investment­s and credits to try to salvage the island’s moribund socialist economy. But Russian officials have urged the government to speed up its own market reforms.

Hacked documents and testimonie­s revealed that Cuban mercenarie­s are also fighting with the Russian Army in Ukraine.

In Díaz-Canel’s talks with the Russian top advisor, Rossiyskay­a Gazeta reported that the Cuban leader praised Putin’s recent interview with former Fox host Tucker Carlson, an hours-long exchange in which the Russian leader tried to provide historical justificat­ions for his invasion of Ukraine.

Díaz-Canel said the interview showed Putin’s “undeniable leadership in the world.”

Nora Gámez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorr­es

 ?? IVAN EGOROV Rossíiskay­a Gazeta ?? Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev, center, discussed security cooperatio­n in a meeting with retired general Raúl Castro in Havana on Monday.
IVAN EGOROV Rossíiskay­a Gazeta Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev, center, discussed security cooperatio­n in a meeting with retired general Raúl Castro in Havana on Monday.

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