Key Takeaways
Background
This assessment is based on open-source reporting, historical intelligence analysis, and publicly available information regarding Cuban military capabilities, regional telecommunications infrastructure, and geopolitical developments in the Caribbean. Key areas of analysis draw upon historical reporting on Cuban signals intelligence facilities, regional military posture, and telecommunications infrastructure distribution. Confidence in this assessment is moderate due to limited transparency surrounding Cuban intelligence operations and the classified nature of signals intelligence activities. However, the geographic and infrastructural factors discussed in this report are well-established and widely acknowledged in regional security analysis.
Geopolitical Context and Current Tensions
Recent geopolitical developments have increased strategic pressure on Cuba and heightened tensions across the Caribbean security environment. For decades, Cuba relied heavily on subsidized oil shipments from Venezuela, particularly under the government of Nicolás Maduro. Venezuelan crude shipments historically served as a critical energy lifeline for the Cuban economy, supporting electricity generation, transportation infrastructure, and industrial activity.
However, Venezuela’s prolonged economic instability and declining oil production have significantly reduced the reliability of these shipments. Energy disruptions have contributed to recurring fuel shortages, electricity rationing, and grid instability within Cuba, placing additional pressure on the Cuban government. These tensions have been compounded by regional instability following the 2026 United States intervention in Venezuela, which disrupted one of Cuba’s most important political and economic partnerships.
At the same time, relations between the United States and Cuba remain strained. The United States continues to enforce economic sanctions and maintain the longstanding embargo against Havana. Cuba’s historic intelligence cooperation with geopolitical competitors of the United States further complicates bilateral relations. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has publicly stated that the status quo in Cuba is unacceptable and has been actively involved in diplomatic discussions related to the island’s political future, underscoring the administration’s focus on the issue. President Trump has also made comments that appear to indicate there may be future action involving Cuba, suggesting Cuba is on the administration’s strategic agenda.
These dynamics increase the likelihood that Cuba will prioritize intelligence collection and strategic awareness activities focused on US military posture, communications infrastructure, and regional activity within the Caribbean basin.
Strategic Context: Cuba as an Intelligence Hub
Cuba occupies one of the most strategically advantageous geographic positions in the Western Hemisphere. Situated near major US military installations and telecommunications infrastructure, the island lies along critical maritime and aviation corridors connecting North America, Latin America, and Europe.
This location places Cuba within monitoring range of:
As a result, Cuba has historically functioned less as a conventional military power and more as an intelligence observation platform positioned near the United States. Signals traversing the region include satellite communications, maritime radio transmissions, aviation control signals, and large volumes of commercial telecommunications data. Even when encrypted, these signals can provide valuable intelligence through traffic analysis, signal signatures, and emitter identification.
Legacy Signals Intelligence Infrastructure
During the Cold War, the Soviet Union constructed a major interception complex at the Lourdes SIGINT facility, which monitored large volumes of US communications traffic. At its peak the facility reportedly hosted hundreds of intelligence personnel and intercepted diplomatic, military, and satellite communications signals from across the southeastern United States.
Although Russia closed the facility in 2001, Cuba retained much of the technical expertise and infrastructure associated with signals interception operations. Analysts assess that elements of these capabilities likely remain operational today and may be supplemented through technical cooperation with foreign intelligence partners. Because of the island’s proximity to the United States, even relatively modest surveillance systems positioned in Cuba can capture valuable signals from regional communications networks.
Electronic Warfare Capabilities
Electronic warfare capabilities within Cuba fall primarily under the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces, which oversees military intelligence and communications monitoring.
Cuba’s EW posture focuses primarily on electronic surveillance and signal detection, including:
These systems enable Cuban analysts to detect and characterize electronic emissions from naval vessels, aircraft communications systems, and satellite links operating across the Caribbean region. Cuba’s air-defense network also contributes to electronic detection capabilities. Radar systems associated with Soviet-era surface-to-air missile platforms can provide aircraft tracking and early warning coverage.
While technologically outdated compared to modern systems, Cuba’s radar networks remain capable of detecting aircraft activity and electronic emissions within Cuban airspace and nearby maritime areas. Limited electronic attack capabilities likely exist, including localized radio-frequency jamming and communications interference. However, Cuba is not known to operate modern electronic warfare platforms such as mobile spectrum warfare systems, electronic attack aircraft, or advanced satellite disruption systems.
Unexplained health incidents affecting US diplomatic personnel in Havana beginning in 2016 also drew international attention to the electromagnetic environment in Cuba. Investigations examined whether exposure to directed radio frequency or microwave energy could explain the symptoms reported by some personnel. US intelligence assessments have not reached a definitive conclusion regarding the cause of these incidents, and attribution remains disputed. However, the episode highlighted the strategic relevance of the electromagnetic spectrum and signals intelligence activity in the region.
Cyber and Digital Capabilities
Cuba’s cyber posture is primarily oriented toward surveillance and domestic information control rather than large-scale offensive cyber operations.
The Cuban government maintains centralized control over domestic telecommunications infrastructure and internet service providers. Authorities have demonstrated the capability to:
These tools are used primarily for domestic security and information management rather than external cyber operations. At present, there is an absence of publicly documented, credible incidents in which the Cuban government or state-sponsored actors based in Cuba have been attributed as the originator of significant outbound offensive cyber activities targeting foreign entities. It is also worth noting that industry analysts have assessed “Cuba Ransomware”, despite the name, did not likely originate from Cuba.
Intelligence Partnerships
Cuba’s intelligence relevance increases through cooperation with larger intelligence powers. Historically, Soviet and later Russian intelligence services operated signals interception infrastructure on the island. More recently, analysts have suggested the possibility of expanded technical cooperation involving telecommunications monitoring systems. China also reportedly has access to intelligence gathered by Cuban entities.
Such partnerships could enable foreign intelligence services to collect signals from:
In this capacity, Cuba functions as a collection platform enabling proximity-based signals intelligence against US communications networks.
Undersea Telecommunications Infrastructure Risks
The Caribbean region surrounding Cuba hosts multiple undersea fiber-optic cables that carry internet and telecommunications traffic between North America, Latin America, and Europe. Major cable landing points in Florida connect global telecommunications networks to the broader internet infrastructure of the United States.
While encrypted traffic cannot easily be decrypted, monitoring cable routes or telecommunications infrastructure could reveal:
In a crisis scenario, undersea cable infrastructure in the Caribbean could represent a potential target for disruption or sabotage. Such operations would likely involve physical damage to cable systems rather than purely cyber intrusion.
Maritime and Electronic Surveillance
The Caribbean basin is one of the busiest maritime regions in the Western Hemisphere. Monitoring maritime radio transmissions, radar emissions, and satellite communications can reveal patterns of naval and commercial shipping activity.
Signals monitoring systems positioned in Cuba could track:
Signals intelligence techniques such as radar signature analysis allow analysts to identify vessel classes or aircraft types based on their electronic emissions.
Additionally, the Cuba-Florida corridor represents one of the most active electronic monitoring environments in the Western Hemisphere. US intelligence agencies operate extensive surveillance systems throughout the region, including those associated with the National Security Agency and United States Southern Command. Additionally, the Naval Station Guantanamo Bay provides a permanent American monitoring presence on the island itself. The result is a dense intelligence environment characterized by continuous electronic monitoring, communications analysis, and signal detection across the region.
Escalation Indicators
Several developments could signal a worsening security environment between the United States and Cuba:
Potential Threat Scenarios
While large-scale cyber attacks originating from Cuba remain unlikely, several threat scenarios represent credible intelligence or security risks within the Caribbean operational environment:
Unmanned aerial operations: Small unmanned aerial systems (drones) launched from maritime platforms could potentially conduct reconnaissance or limited disruptive operations against targets in the southeastern United States. The relatively short distance between Cuba and Florida increases the feasibility of such operations if supported by relay systems or offshore launch platforms.
Don’t have a PolySwarm account? Go here to sign up for a free Community plan or subscribe.
Contact us at hivemind@polyswarm.io | Check out our blog | Subscribe to our reports.