Bangladesh, May 24 -- For more than six decades, relations between the United States and Cuba have been shaped by confrontation, economic pressure, and competing visions of sovereignty. While the Cold War officially ended decades ago, many observers argue that Washington's approach toward Havana still follows a familiar pattern: economic isolation, political coercion, and the persistent threat of stronger intervention. Critics describe this as a strategy of "blockade, blackmail, and invade" - a recurring formula that has appeared in various forms throughout modern American foreign policy.

Recent tensions have once again brought Cuba into the spotlight. Reports circulated in US media alleging that Cuba possessed hundreds of drones and co...