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Cuba's Trump standoff and economic crisis with Michael Bustamante

This week, Ian Bremmer sits down with University of Miami historian and Cuba expert Michael Bustamante to make sense of the US-Cuba standoff.

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Will Trump actually try to "take" Cuba?

Trump says he will have "the honor of taking Cuba." While a military intervention seems unlikely for now, US pressure has pushed Cuba's economy into freefall, and Trump wants to be the president who finally delivers what no one else could.

The problem: Cuba has no political alternative to replace the Castro government, and even an economic deal risks a backlash from Cuban Americans who want regime change. Ian Bremmer breaks down what Trump actually wants from Cuba, and why it won't be simple.

Forty years since Chernobyl: Is nuclear energy more essential than ever?

The darkest day in history for civilian nuclear energy took place 40 years ago this weekend.

On April 26, 1986, a reactor at a nuclear power plant in the then-Soviet (now Ukrainian) town of Chernobyl exploded, with devastating consequences. Poisonous radiation quickly spread across the area, and eventually most of Europe, affecting 3.5 million people per United Nations estimates, and inducing a huge excess of cancer cases in the region – particularly among young children.

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Colombia’s Petro to finally meet Venezuela’s Rodríguez, Iran’s foreign minister wants more talks, The US reportedly mulls gift for Argentina

First Colombia-Venezuela summit since Maduro’s ouster

Colombian President Gustavo Petro meets in Caracas today with Venezuela’s acting President Delcy Rodríguez, their first encounter since the US deposed Rodríguez’s former boss, Nicolás Maduro, and effectively installed Rodríguez as a viceroy. Petro, a left-winger who has clashed repeatedly with US President Donald Trump despite Bogotá’s close ties to the US, sharply criticized that operation. Top on the agenda is security: Petro wants more Venezuelan help to rein in guerrilla and drug groups operating along the long, porous Colombian-Venezuelan border. Rights groups have accused Caracas of supporting some of those organizations in the past. Bogotá and Caracas have a history of close relations, with millions of people holding dual citizenship. Some 3 million Venezuelan refugees currently live in Colombia, more than in any other country.

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Hard Number: US holds up cash for Iraq

Iraq is caught in an ever-tightening vise. The US Treasury recently blocked the delivery of nearly half a billion dollars in US banknotes to Iraq’s central bank, proceeds from Iraqi oil sales that are held by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The US said it wants Iraq to dismantle Iranian proxies in the country, who claimed responsibility for attacks on a US air base and a US embassy in Baghdad last month. Yet as GZERO’s Zac Weisz reported last week, Iraq still retains a diplomatic and economic relationship with Iran, and desperately wants to remain neutral in this war.

Think you know what's going on around the world? Here's your chance to prove it.

Spain is bucking the EU’s tougher-immigration trend with a new plan that allows undocumented migrants already in the country to apply for legal status. To qualify, applicants have to show what?

  • A) They applied for protected status before the end of 2025 and have lived in Spain for at least five months
  • B) They believe Rafael Nadal is the GOAT
  • C) They paid back taxes for every year they’ve lived in Spain

Take the quiz to see if you guessed correctly!

In the first edition of “ask ian” Live, Ian Bremmer takes questions directly from the GZERO community on two geopolitical flashpoints: China’s strategic patience and the US campaign to squeeze Cuba economically.
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One month ago, the White House made their feelings about artificial intelligence regulation clear: they didn’t want it. In its legislative framework for AI regulation, published March 20, the Trump administration took an accelerationist stance toward the burgeoning technology, aiming to largely give US companies free rein as a way to ensure they outpace Chinese rivals in the global AI race.

That was before Anthropic announced on April 7 that it had created Mythos.

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Washington’s blockade expands to Asia

The US Navy isn’t just intercepting Iranian-linked ships outside the Strait of Hormuz. In recent days, it redirected a trio of ships that were passing in Asian waters, per Reuters. One of the ships was reportedly carrying 2 million barrels of Iranian oil, and had been scheduled to discharge the crude in India. The US’s aim is to further strangle Iran’s economy, which is hugely reliant on its crude exports to Asia, and has now redirected 29 Iranian-linked tankers. As the blockade expands, energy leaders are growing increasingly concerned. This morning, the head of the International Energy Agency warned, “We are facing the biggest energy security threat in history.”

Even as the blockade continues, the Pentagon fired Navy Secretary John Phelan on Wednesday night. No explanation was given from the White House, but it marks the second time this month a senior US military official was forced out by the Pentagon.

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Costs for ships to pass through the Panama Canal have hit record highs as the Iran war imperils global oil shipping. According to data from Argus Media, daily auctions to cross the waterway have drawn five times as many bids than prior to the conflict. There’s also been a surge of US oil and fuel shipments through the canal, primarily coming from the Gulf Coast.

The prevailing view a few months ago was that Democrats were likely to retake the House of Representatives in November's midterm elections. In recent decades, these cycles have tended to cut against the party in control of the White House, and Republicans held a razor-thin House majority in a political environment that was already tilting blue.

The Senate, however, looked out of reach. Democrats would need to defend 13 seats plus flip four Republican-held ones, including two in states President Trump won by double digits. This is a tall order in our hyper-polarized era of slim-margin elections, made even steeper by an administration willing to tilt the playing field in its favor. It’s no wonder betting markets and political analysts (ourselves included) had Republicans as heavy favorites to hold the upper chamber.

But in case you’d forgotten, we’re living in 2026, when unprecedented things happen every day. And boy have things changed.

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Watch: Clouds. In honor of Earth Day, go sit outside and watch some clouds. It’s actually good for your health. – Natalie J.

Eat from the Hudson River. For the first time in five decades, some fish from New York City’s Lower Hudson are safe enough to eat, according to advice from the New York Department of Health earlier this month. It’s a big changeup for the river that’s been polluted since the Industrial Revolution. – Nolan

Read: The Sound of Things Falling.” Given our mention of Colombia in today’s newsletter, it’s only right that I recommend to you this exquisite novel by Juan Gabriel Vásquez – which itself was recommended to me by the newly-crowned Webby winner Alex Kliment. As you may have guessed, the book itself is a reference to planes – specifically, the use of them to transport drugs from Colombia to the United States. But rather than laying out the details of this drug trade, this historical fiction lays out the after effects of the violence that struck Colombian society in the 1980s and 1990s, and how it touched every single citizen. It’s a short, beautiful read that may prompt a few tears. – Zac

US extends ceasefire, but also blockade

President Donald Trump announced on social media on Tuesday that he was extending the ceasefire with Iran until their leaders “can come up with a unified proposal.” He did not provide a deadline, though, and it remains unclear how and when this impasse over ending the war will end. The US leader added that the US blockade of the Strait of Hormuz will continue, which Iran’s foreign minister labeled “an act of war.” Then this morning, an Iranian gunboat attacked a cargo ship in the Strait, according to a UK shipping monitor, as both sides try to assert control over the vital waterway. Two more boats have since been hit, while Iran claims it has seized two. Meanwhile, US Vice President JD Vance indefinitely postponed his trip to Pakistan, where a second round of US-Iran talks were set to take place this week. With Asia facing severe energy shortages – affecting everything from health care to food supplies – and jet fuel supplies dwindling, the urgency to end the war and reopen the Strait will only grow.

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