Cuba on the Brink Michael J. Bustamante January 1, 2026 Cuban soldiers at a ceremony in Havana, November 2025 Norlys Perez / Reuters MICHAEL J. BUSTAMANTE is Emilio Bacardí Moreau Chair in Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami and the author of Cuban Memory Wars: Retrospective Politics in Revolution and Exile . In 2014, after the Obama administration and Cuba’s government announced an agreement to restore diplomatic ties, the world descended on Havana. Everyone from the Rolling Stones to would-be investors rushed to claim a stake in the island’s future. Raúl Castro, the long-serving minister of defense, had assumed power from his ailing elder brother Fidel several years earlier and launched moderate economic reforms: allowing for more small private businesses, loosening rules for foreign investments, and downsizing the state’s payroll. Together, the normalization of relations with the United States and the government’s internal actua...
Posts
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
About the New Iranian Protests Remember the predictions from so many experts that a military strike on Iran’s nuclear sites would cause Iranians to rally behind their regime? You can junk that conventional wisdom. As 2026 dawns, the Iranian people are marching in protest only months after the Israel-U.S. attack. The protests began among shopkeepers and merchants in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar, but they have spread to other cities and groups. Students in particular have joined, with support from truckers and bus drivers. Economic grievances are in the forefront amid 42% inflation, a currency that has lost 40% of its value against the dollar since the June war, and even a lack of water and reliable energy. Economic protests can easily turn political, and the unrest is dangerous to the regime because deprivation is widespread. “Death to the dictator,” students chanted in the country’s northwest. In Tehran others chanted, “Neither Gaza, nor Lebanon, I give my life for Iran.” The regi...
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
The Hindu Attacks on India’s Christians HOUSES OF WORSHIP By Tunku Varadarajan Since Narendra Modi became India’s prime minister in 2014, the country has seen a breathtaking rise in violence against religious minorities by groups aligned with his Hindu-supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party. India’s Muslims, who are 14% of the population, have borne the brunt of the most brutal physical attacks. They face active discrimination in employment, education and housing, and are often prevented from voting and pursuing businesses in Hindu-majority areas. They have been ghettoized. But as several ugly events in recent weeks have shown, Christians—a mere 2.3% of Indians, many of whom belong to the poorest sections of society— are also subjected to widespread hatred and thuggery. Although Hindus are 80% of India’s population, radical Hindus are obsessed with the imagined dangers of Christianity. As many as 12 states have laws prohibiting religious conversion by “force, fraud, or allurement”—th...
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Navigated Menu Back Financial Times Financial Times UK 2 Jan 2026 Buttons.Search Options The costs of China’s ‘economic fortress’ Emboldened by its success in neutralising US tariffs, Beijing plans to reinforce its dominance of global manufacturing despite persistent deflation at home and rising tensions with other trading partners. By Joe Leahy, Tom Hale and Arjun Neil Alim With additional contributions from Cheng Leng and Wenjie Ding in Beijing Data visualisation by Keith Fray Settings Print Share Listen At a recent high-level government conference in Beijing, senior officials basked in China’s success over the past year year in its trade war with the US. “Our five-year planning system ensures policy consistency and continuity — something western politicians can never achieve given their constant changes of government,” one senior cadre told the gathering. For Beijing, the tariff war is the clearest evidence yet that President X...