Sociedad Media covers Cuba’s unfolding crisis with original reporting from Miami—the city with the largest Cuban exile community in the world. From the island’s historic blackouts and consecutive nights of street protests, to U.S.-Cuba negotiations, Díaz-Canel’s future, and the energy collapse threatening the regime’s survival, we track every development in the story that defines Miami’s Cuban community like no other
For the first time in six decades, Cuba is formally allowing its nationals abroad to own and invest in private businesses on the island. But skepticism in Miami runs just as deep as the economic desperation driving the offer
Viral photo shows Rubio posed in front of a Cuba map at SOUTHCOM headquarters in Doral. He then tells reporters the meeting “had something to do with Cuba,” but conceals specifics
On May Day, Raúl Castro appeared in public for the first time in months. Trump signed a new executive order expanding sanctions, and Díaz-Canel invoked the “War of All the People” doctrine, as tensions ramp up in the Caribbean
Senate Republicans block war powers resolution that would have required congressional approval before Trump could strike Cuba. Two Republicans crossed the aisle
A U.S. government plane landed in Havana for the first time since the Obama-era, and Trump promises “new dawn for Cuba” as new polls show 79% of South Florida's Cubans support military intervention. Here’s the full picture
At a rally on Friday, Trump told thousands of supporters that American military power would soon deliver a moment “70 years in the making” for Cuba. The Pentagon is planning, and back-channel talks are underway
USA Today reveals that the White House directed the Pentagon to ramp up planning for potential military operations against Cuba. No order has been given. But the planning is real — and Cuba's president intends to fight back
In his first interview with a U.S. television network in decades, Cuba’s president told NBC’s Kristen Welker he would not resign. Outside the interview room, Cuba was experiencing its worst blackouts in history, its largest street protests since 2021, and a fuel blockade with no end in sight
Reps. Pramila Jayapal and Jonathan Jackson met with Díaz-Canel, toured hospitals, and called Trump’s blockade “economic bombing.” But will they be taken seriously by Cubans in Miami?
A second Russian oil tanker is heading to Cuba. It will buy the island days, not months. The harder question is what happens when the fuel runs out again
Disturbing images from Cuba’s largest zoo show skeletal lions lying on concrete floors, as the island’s economic collapse extends its reach to the most vulnerable captive animals