Diplomacy or Political Strategy? Cuban Regime Appoints Eugenio Martinez as New Ambassador to Mexico

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Eugenio Martinez (Diario de Cuba)

What is presented today as “diplomacy” could actually be political and intelligence penetration.

The Cuban regime has just appointed Eugenio Martinez, an officer from its intelligence apparatus, not a career diplomat, as ambassador to Mexico.

And he doesn’t come alone: ​​his wife, Yohana Tabada, a high-ranking official at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MINREX) and a regular operator of the Castro regime’s narrative, occupies the second-in-command position at the mission. The embassy has been transformed into a political-family headquarters.

This is nothing new. This is how it began in Venezuela: first “missions,” then advisors, then military personnel, and finally total control. When the Cuban regime loses one host, it looks for another.

The United States just removed the tumor from Venezuela, and now they are desperately searching for a new place to embed themselves. Mexico, due to its regional weight, its border, and its geopolitical value, is a prime target.

Make no mistake: they are not coming to “cooperate,” they are coming to operate. To map, influence, infiltrate institutions, export methods of social control, and fortify ideological alliances. Castroism does not represent Cubans; it represents a security apparatus disguised as diplomacy.

History is clear and verifiable: once the Cuban regime takes hold, there is no easy turning back. What begins as a “mission” ends up as dependency. What is sold as solidarity ends in a loss of sovereignty.

Mexico still has time. Venezuela was warned and did not listen. Today, it pays the price.

Mexico Daily Post