Cuba has acquired more than 300 military drones and has reportedly started discussing plans to use them against the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, American naval vessels, and — this is the fun part — Key West, Florida. That's American soil, folks. Ninety miles from a communist regime that's now armed with attack drones and apparently feeling froggy.
But sure, let's send more congressional Democrats over there to shake hands and take photos. That'll fix it.
Axios reporter Marc Caputo broke the story, reporting that "Cuba has acquired more than 300 military drones and recently began discussing plans to use them to attack the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, military vessels & possibly Key West." Possibly Key West. As in, possibly the southernmost point of the United States, where American citizens are currently sipping margaritas completely unaware that a hostile communist nation is war-gaming drone strikes on their zip code.
According to Twitchy, this revelation comes as CIA Director John Ratcliffe traveled to Cuba on May 14, 2026, to deliver the message personally. A CIA official stated that "Director Ratcliffe made clear that Cuba can no longer serve as a platform for adversaries" and that "the Western Hemisphere cannot be our adversaries' playground." That's the kind of language adults use when a tiny island nation 90 miles off the coast starts stockpiling military hardware aimed at your backyard.
A senior U.S. official put it even more bluntly: "When we think about those types of technologies being that close, and a range of bad actors from terror groups to drug cartels to Iranians to the Russians, it's concerning." The official added simply: "It's a growing threat."
A growing threat. Three hundred drones. Aimed at Florida.
And what are Democrats doing about it? Well, Rep. Pramila Jayapal decided this was the perfect weekend to cozy up to the Cuban regime. Because nothing says "I take national security seriously" like schmoozing with the communist government that's actively discussing how to attack your own country's military installations.
The timing is absolutely perfect — in the worst possible way. One arm of the U.S. government is sending the CIA director to tell Cuba to knock it off, while members of Congress from the other party are over there giving the regime legitimacy and photo ops. Cuba's building a drone fleet and Democrats are building bridges. Incredible.
Of course, the left is already downplaying the whole thing. Rep. Ruben Gallego dismissed the threat entirely, saying "No country in the current economic and military situation that Cuba is in would ever preemptively strike a super power like the US." Right. Because hostile nations with nothing to lose and everything to prove never do anything irrational. That's definitely how history works.
And commentator Max Blumenthal tried to discredit the reporting altogether, calling Caputo a "self-described Florida man" and "a longtime water carrier for Marco Rubio." Classic playbook — when you can't argue the facts, attack the reporter.
Here's what the smart people in the room already understand: it's not just Cuba. It's who's behind Cuba. The Iranians. The Russians. Drug cartels. Terror groups. Cuba is a launchpad, and 300 military drones in the hands of a regime that openly discusses attacking American targets isn't a diplomatic disagreement. It's a threat.
Key West isn't some abstract geopolitical chess piece on a map in a Pentagon briefing room. It's a city. With Americans in it. Ninety miles from a country that just armed itself with 300 drones and started talking about where to aim them.
But by all means, let's send a few more Democrats down there for a friendly visit. I'm sure that'll calm things right down.