Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Cuba's Fighters For Hire: How Money And Visas Feed Russia's War


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) A quiet pipeline now links Havana to the trenches of eastern Ukraine. Ukraine's military intelligence says it has identified 1,076 Cuban nationals who have served or are serving in Russian units, with 96 dead or missing.

A separate U.S. assessment estimates the current number between 1,000 and 5,000. The human route is simple: social-media offers promising steady pay; travel on tourist or work visas; Russian-language contracts; and, in many cases, as little as two weeks of training at the Avangard center near Moscow before assault duty.

Reported pay hovers around $2,000 a month-life-changing money in today's Cuban economy. Havana denies sending anyone to war and points to prosecutions since 2023 under its anti-mercenarism laws, after it said it had uncovered a recruitment network.

Those legal moves coexist with warmer defense ties to Russia and Belarus-cooperation that does not prove state-run deployments but does lower frictions for brokers who arrange travel and contracts.

The story behind the story is about incentives, not ideology. Cuba's economic strain makes overseas military contracts attractive to young men with few options.



Russia needs manpower that does not trigger domestic backlash. Intermediaries-some presented as“job” or“construction” fixers-bridge the gap with documents, tickets, and fast onboarding. Social platforms do the rest, turning targeted ads and posts into a steady trickle of recruits.
Cuba's Fighters and the Unseen Return Flow of Conflict Skills
Why this matters beyond Europe is what those fighters learn-and where those skills go next. Short, brutal rotations teach small-unit urban tactics, drones, and electronic countermeasures.

Veterans returning to Cuba, or moving through allied regimes in the region, can be absorbed into security forces, hired by criminal networks, or used to stiffen governments against street protests. That is a hemispheric security issue, not a distant headline.

What to watch now: tighter monitoring of routes through Minsk and Moscow; sanctions on recruiters and travel fixers; deeper intelligence sharing with democratic partners in Latin America; and investments in policing standards and civil-society resilience in countries most vulnerable to infiltration.

This is a straightforward story: a war that needs people, an island that needs cash, and a network that turns both needs into supply. The consequences will not stay in the Donbas.

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