“I present to you the paramilitary man who killed your people in Venezuela,” Ratcliffe told his counterpart in Havana, according to CBS

14ymedio, Havana, May 24, 2026 — The report published by CBS News about CIA director John Ratcliffe’s visit to Havana contains all the ingredients of a scene designed to shock: a U.S. intelligence chief sitting before senior Cuban officials and, beside him, a paramilitary operative who allegedly participated in the capture of Nicolás Maduro. According to the report, Ratcliffe not only brought him to the meeting, but introduced him as the man responsible for the deaths of the 32 Cuban military personnel during the January operation in Venezuela.
The detail is explosive. Imagining that the CIA presented this supposed paramilitary operative before the heads of the Cuban security apparatus as “the man who killed your people” carries an obvious theatrical charge, difficult to accept without reservations.
The scene described by CBS sounds more like dramatized intimidation than secret diplomacy. It may have happened, but it is also possible that the story was inflated by sources interested in projecting an image of extreme toughness in negotiations with Havana.
In CIA language, “paramilitary” can refer to special activities operators linked to covert missions or direct-action forces
The word “paramilitary” itself requires caution. In the Latin American world, the term refers to irregular armed groups, illegal squads, or structures operating parallel to the State. In CIA language, however, it can refer to special activities operators connected to covert missions or direct-action forces. Translated without context, the expression can distort public continue reading
CBS states that Ratcliffe met, among others, with Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro, grandson of Raúl Castro. The outlet identifies him as “Raulito,” a nickname used in family and diplomatic circles, though among Cubans he is better known as “El Cangrejo” (“The Crab”).
The presence of Rodríguez Castro at the meeting confirms, at least, his role as a direct link to the family core that has ruled Cuba for more than six decades. His prominence also reinforces the idea that Washington’s message would not be aimed at Miguel Díaz-Canel’s formal Government, but at the heart of real power: the military, the security services, and the Castro family.
The only American serviceman publicly identified for participating in Maduro’s capture is Eric Slover
Even so, the story of the paramilitary operative raises eyebrows. Until now,
the only American serviceman publicly identified for his participation in Maduro’s capture is Eric Slover, a U.S. Army helicopter pilot decorated by Donald Trump with the Medal of Honor during the State of the Union address.
But Slover has not been described as a CIA paramilitary operative, but rather as an American serviceman. If the “paramilitary” mentioned by CBS is in fact a covert operator, it is difficult to believe Washington would want to display him before Cuban officials, even as an intimidation tactic.
The story also has a problem of operational logic. The CIA usually protects the identity of its operatives with extreme secrecy, especially if they participated in a mission as sensitive as the capture of a foreign head of state. Bringing one of them to Havana, identifying him before historic adversaries, and directly associating him with the deaths of Cuban military personnel would imply an unnecessary risk. Cuba maintains intelligence ties with Russia, China, and Iran. It also still keeps its embassy active in Venezuela and operates special flights between Havana and Caracas. Exposing an operative of that profile before Havana would amount to handing information to half of Washington’s adversarial intelligence community.
Exposing an operative of that profile before Havana would amount to handing over information
That does not mean the report is false. The meeting took place. The tension exists. The pressure on Cuba is real. Maduro’s fall altered the regional chessboard. But the scene of the paramilitary operative presented like a human trophy before the Cubans seems too novelistic even for a psychological warfare leak.
In any case, the report reveals that Washington is trying to make Havana understand that the old regional balance has been broken. Venezuela is no longer the shield it once was. The Castros, even in biological retreat, remain interlocutors of power. And Cuba once again finds itself at the center of a confrontation that mixes intelligence, oil, sanctions, threats, and the memory of the Cold War.
Translated by Regina Anavy
______________________
COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.









🖋️Author Julio M. Shiling











