There are moments when history reduces itself to a single, unavoidable contrast. Today is one of them. As renewed threats and economic aggression once again emanate from Washington under Donald Trump, an old truth regains its sharpness:
Cuba sends doctors. The United States sends bombs.
This is not a slogan invented for effect. It is a reflection of two opposing social systems, two different priorities, two irreconcilable visions of what a society should produce—and for whom.
It did not work.
Instead of collapsing, the island reorganized itself. Instead of militarizing its society, it invested in education and public health. When much of the pre-revolutionary medical elite left the country expecting the Revolution to fall, Cuba made a historic decision: it would form a new generation of doctors drawn from workers and peasants. Healthcare would not depend on wealth. It would be universal, preventive, and public.
Under the leadership of Fidel Castro, scarce resources were directed not toward stock exchanges or private insurance conglomerates, but toward polyclinics, vaccination programs, and medical schools. In a poor country under siege, the Revolution chose to multiply doctors.
That choice transformed Cuba internally. Life expectancy rose. Infant mortality dropped to levels comparable with developed nations. Entire rural areas that had been abandoned under the old order received consistent medical care for the first time. Health ceased to be a commodity and became a social guarantee.
But Cuba did not stop at its own borders.
Time and again, when disaster struck elsewhere, Cuban medical brigades were there. After earthquakes in Latin America, hurricanes in the Caribbean, epidemics in Africa, and pandemics that paralyzed wealthy nations, Cuban doctors boarded planes carrying not weapons but stethoscopes. In the midst of Ebola’s devastation in West Africa, it was Cuban medical personnel who arrived in significant numbers when many powerful countries hesitated. During the COVID-19 crisis, Cuban brigades assisted overwhelmed healthcare systems abroad while the island simultaneously developed its own vaccines despite the blockade.
This is not charity diplomacy. It flows from a different organizing principle. A planned economy, even one with limited material wealth, can prioritize the defense of life because it is not governed by private profit.
Now look at the other side of the contrast.
The US commands the largest military budget in history. Its defense spending surpasses that of entire regions combined. It maintains hundreds of overseas bases and has been involved—directly or indirectly—in wars, invasions, regime-change operations, sanctions campaigns, and covert interventions across continents. From Southeast Asia to the Middle East, from Latin America to Eastern Europe, its foreign policy has consistently relied on military leverage and economic coercion.
At home, millions of Americans struggle with medical debt. Entire communities face inadequate healthcare access. Life-saving medication can be priced beyond reach. Yet there is no comparable hesitation when funding new weapons systems, expanding military alliances, or modernizing nuclear arsenals.
This contrast is not about national character. It is about structure.
Capitalism in its imperial stage concentrates wealth, protects corporate power, and projects military force to secure economic interests. Socialist construction—however constrained by massive external pressure—attempts to allocate resources according to collective need.
For more than six decades, the US blockade has attempted to make daily life in Cuba unbearable. It restricts access to medical equipment, fuel, spare parts, financial transactions, and international trade. It punishes third countries that attempt normal economic relations with the island. Every shortage is then cynically cited as proof that socialism “fails,” while the external chokehold is treated as invisible.
And yet, despite all this, Cuba continues to graduate doctors in remarkable numbers. It continues to dispatch medical brigades abroad. It continues to treat healthcare not as a luxury but as a right.
That reality is politically dangerous.
Washington is unsettled not by Cuban strength, but by Cuban example. A small Caribbean nation, ninety miles from Florida, demonstrating that education can be free, that healthcare can be universal, that solidarity can cross borders without corporate contracts—this stands as a quiet but persistent rebuke to the dominant model.
The difference can be expressed simply:
One system invests in aircraft carriers; the other invests in pediatricians.
One system refines sanctions; the other refines vaccination campaigns.
One system speaks of “freedom” while tightening economic sieges; the other sends medical teams to communities that cannot pay.
Cuba is not a utopia. No society operating under permanent external pressure can be free of contradictions or difficulties. But its priorities are unmistakable. When faced with scarcity, it chooses to educate. When confronted with crisis, it chooses to heal. When attacked economically, it responds by training more doctors.
That moral orientation matters.
Cuba, a small island just ninety miles from Florida, keeps demonstrating that another world is possible — not through declarations and speeches, but through doctors, classrooms, and solidarity. And that living example is what the empire will never forgive.
* Nikos Mottas is the Editor-in-Chief of In Defense of Communism.
