Cuban Diplomat Briefed 50 U.S. Activists on Sanctions Bills as 3 Agencies Probe Influence Campaign
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 26
Cuban Diplomat Briefed 50 U.S. Activists on Sanctions Bills as 3 Agencies Probe Influence Campaign
2 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 26
At a May 9 meeting in Wilmington, California, Cuban Embassy official David Ramírez Álvarez walked roughly 50 activists through U.S. bills and lobbying tactics aimed at lifting sanctions on Cuba.
A joint Justice, State and Treasury probe is examining whether that recurring coordination with nonprofits, unions and influencers crossed from protected advocacy into foreign-directed political activity or sanctions violations.
Ramírez Álvarez highlighted measures including S.136 and H.R. 7521, urged pressure on lawmakers, and described the moment as one of the most active in 10 years for Cuba-related legislation.
Investigators are also tracing a wider network that Fox said spans 145 organizations with about $1 billion in annual revenue, including groups tied to CodePink, the People's Forum and Venceremos Brigade.
Cuba's embassy denied wrongdoing, saying its diplomats act within the Vienna Convention, while federal officials are weighing possible FARA, funding and travel-related implications across the broader pro-Cuba network.
Where is the legal line for a foreign diplomat between promoting their country and directing a U.S. political campaign?
How does the U.S. distinguish between protected humanitarian aid and illegal support for a sanctioned government?
How are global funding networks, allegedly tied to China, reshaping the landscape of U.S. activism on foreign policy?