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What will happen to tourism in Cuba? Inside GAESA, the military conglomerate on Washington’s radar

When a Cuban person on the island wants to refer to β€œthose in charge,” they lightly tap their shoulder with two fingers. The subtle gesture, shaped by nearly seven decades of censorship, is a reference to the epaulet of a military uniform. In Cuba, people do not speak of the government or the party (the Communist Party of Cuba, the only legal one), but rather of the β€œcountry’s leadership.” It is a euphemism that points to the real political and economic power: the Revolutionary Armed Forces (FAR).

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