Federal investigators are following the money and the messaging
Justice Department and Treasury officials are reportedly digging into whether U.S.-based nonprofits, activist groups, and political organizers worked with Cuban government officials in a foreign influence effort. According to Fox News Digital, the probe is not just about speeches or social media posts. It is said to include lobbying, fundraising, delegations, and political organizing that may have crossed the line from activism into coordinated foreign influence. That is the kind of old-fashioned swamp business that always seems to bloom when the radical crowd gets a megaphone and a budget.
The response was fast and strangely polished
The report says the reaction to Attorney General Todd Blanche’s murder charges against Cuban leader Raúl Castro came almost instantly, as if the talking points were already sitting in a folder waiting for the green light. Fox says the Party for Socialism and Liberation posted pre-made graphics within minutes, while other aligned voices and outlets quickly echoed the same line of attack. That kind of speed does not happen by accident. It looks more like an organized communications machine than a bunch of independent citizens all having the same original thought at once, which, frankly, is not how normal people operate.
https://x.com/pslnational/status/2057155211433771407?s=20
https://x.com/vijayprashad/status/2057360408831308053
A large network appears to be involved
Fox News Digital says it identified 145 nonprofits, labor groups, advocacy organizations, and activist collectives in the U.S. that are mobilizing in support of the Cuban government and the Communist Party of Cuba. The combined annual revenue of those groups is reported to be about $1 billion, which helps explain how these operations can move so quickly and speak with such a loud, unified voice. The report also ties several of the groups to financier Neville Roy Singham, whose network has already drawn scrutiny for backing far-left causes and Chinese Communist Party messaging. The usual crowd calls this “solidarity,” but when the same network keeps showing up around hostile regimes, people are right to ask whose interests are really being served.
The embassy denies wrongdoing, but the questions remain
The Cuban Embassy in Washington denied improper activity and said its diplomats follow the Vienna Convention, which requires them not to interfere in another country’s internal affairs. The embassy also said it is normal for diplomats to meet with civil society groups and promote friendly relations. Fine. But if everything is so harmless, then investigators should have no trouble sorting out what is legitimate diplomacy and what looks like a coordinated political operation dressed up as activism. Sources told Fox that the probe may also examine several prominent figures linked to the Cuba solidarity world, including Twitch streamer Hasan Piker, CodePink co-founder Medea Benjamin, and CodePink D.C. coordinator Olivia DiNucci.
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