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rss-bridge 2026-02-28T10:00:08+00:00

‘Adventurism has had its day’: speedboat shootout leaves Miami’s exiled Cubans bewildered

Few clues as to how 10 heavily armed men intercepted on stolen speedboat came together from across Florida or what they hoped to achieve

Foot traffic was slow outside the Bay of Pigs Museum on Calle Ocho in Miami’s Little Havana neighbourhood. A few tourists in T-shirts and shorts bypassed the gallery dedicated to one of the most fateful days in Cuba’s history and headed instead to nearby Máximo Gómez Park to take photographs of Cuban exiles playing dominoes.

This is the street at the heart of the Cuban expat community of more than 1 million people where tens of thousands partied through the night in November 2016 to celebrate the death of Fidel Castro, and where they gathered in sorrow almost exactly 30 years ago to mourn four Cuban-Americans shot down by the communist country’s air force as they conducted a mission for the humanitarian exile group Brothers to the Rescue.

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[People pose for a photo next to a Little Havana sign and a giant rooster statue]

People pose for a photo on Calle Ocho in the centre of the Little Havana neighbourhood in Miami, August 2025. Photograph: Giorgio Viera/AFP/Getty

People pose for a photo on Calle Ocho in the centre of the Little Havana neighbourhood in Miami, August 2025. Photograph: Giorgio Viera/AFP/Getty

‘Adventurism has had its day’: speedboat shootout leaves Miami’s exiled Cubans bewildered

Few clues as to how 10 heavily armed men intercepted on stolen speedboat came together from across Florida or what they hoped to achieve

Foot traffic was slow outside the Bay of Pigs Museum on Calle Ocho in Miami’s Little Havana neighbourhood. A few tourists in T-shirts and shorts bypassed the gallery dedicated to one of the most fateful days in Cuba’s history and headed instead to nearby Máximo Gómez Park to take photographs of Cuban exiles playing dominoes.

This is the street at the heart of the Cuban expat community of more than 1 million people where tens of thousands partied through the night in November 2016 to celebrate the death of Fidel Castro, and where they gathered in sorrow almost exactly 30 years ago to mourn four Cuban-Americans shot down by the communist country’s air force as they conducted a mission for the humanitarian exile group Brothers to the Rescue.

[A man dressed as Fidel Castro feigns death as people look on.]

A man dressed as Fidel Castro celebrates with other members of the Cuban community in Miami after Castro’s death in 2016. Photograph: Wilfredo Lee/AP

This week, however, the air was more of curiosity and bewilderment at news of a shootout on Wednesday at Cayo Falcones, barely a mile off Cuba’s north coast, between the Cuban coastguard and 10 heavily armed men onboard a speedboat stolen in Florida.

Cuba’s government said border agents shot back when somebody on the speedboat started firing on them, killing four and wounding six. It said the men were dressed in camouflage and armed with assault rifles, handguns, homemade explosives, ballistic vests and telescopic sights, and in possession of “a significant number of containers bearing the symbols of counter-revolutionary organisations”.

“Didn’t we stop doing that years ago?” said Javi González, a second-generation Cuban-American office worker on his coffee break, referring to the ill-fated, CIA-backed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion by Cuban paramilitary exiles seeking to overthrow the Castro regime, for which the museum is named.

The mystery deepened as family, friends and acquaintances began to confirm the names of those involved (a list provided by Cuban officials on Wednesday night of “terrorists and mercenaries” mistakenly identified at least one person who had been in south Florida at the time), and a vigil was held in Miami late on Thursday.

[A person displays a page with photos of three men and the word ‘Héroes’ beneath them.]

A person displays a page with photos of three individuals declared killed in the shootout during a vigil in Miami. Photograph: Cristóbal Herrera/EPA

The tributes were warm, praising “patriots committed to the cause of freedom”. José Daniel Ferrer, the prominent Cuban dissident leader freed last year, posted to social media his “respect and admiration for those who died assassinated by the Castro-communist tyranny north of Villa Clara”.

But there were few clues as to how the 10, confirmed by the state department on Thursday night to include at least two US citizens, one dead, and a number of permanent residents and visa holders, had come together from various places across Florida. Or why they had embarked on such a misadventure. Or what they had been hoping to achieve.

Map of Cuba and approximate location of the incident

One of the four killed was Michel Ortega Casanova, a member of the Casa Cuba de Tampa expat group and the city’s chapter of the Cuban Republican party. A truck driver, Casanova had been pulled into what his brother Misael told the Associated Press was an “obsessive and diabolical” quest for Cuba’s freedom.

“They became so obsessed that they didn’t think about the consequences, nor their own lives,” he said.

Also unknown, so far at least, is who funded their operation. The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, a son of Cuban immigrants, has insisted the government was not involved and had no knowledge of it, and would be conducting its own inquiry “to figure out exactly what happened” instead of accepting information provided by Cuba.

Guillermo Grenier, a Havana-born professor of sociology and faculty member of the Cuban-American Institute at Miami’s Florida International University (FIU), said: “Some people are suggesting the CIA are involved, but the CIA doesn’t do this. If they want to be in there they land on an airplane, they’re not sneaking in.”

[A screen shows John F Kennedy giving an address.]

A display shows excerpts of John F Kennedy’s October 1962 televised address about the Cuban missile crisis at the John F Kennedy Library in Boston. Photograph: Reuters

Grenier said the Cayo Falcones endeavour had parallels in the immediate post-Cuban revolution period of the 1960s, when thousands of exiles formed themselves into a commando-style group called Alpha 66 and conducted military training in the Florida Everglades in readiness to seize back their homeland.

It is also reminiscent of more recent, unrealistic “made in Miami” coup plots, including a fanciful 2019 plan to abduct Venezuela’s leader (which the Trump administration achieved last month), and a 2021 scheme to assassinate Haiti’s leader using Colombian mercenaries.

But Grenier said the post-revolution days were long gone. Two decades of FIU polling shows newer generations of Cuban-Americans are increasingly in favour of engagement with their homeland, while the older, hardline exile groups that traditionally backed a forcible overthrow of the Castro regime have struggled to maintain members and interest.

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