UMVA has learned that a sprawling new signals‑intelligence hub is quietly springing up just outside Havana, poised to shadow every flicker of U.S. military activity along Florida’s coast.
Satellite images and insider reports now reveal a massive circular antenna array rising where a modest array once stood, a change that could let foreign analysts track aircraft and ships from thousands of miles away.
The upgraded facility sits a mere ninety miles from Key West, Homestead Air Reserve Base, and the launch pads of Cape Canaveral—places where U.S. forces train, test, and fire rockets into orbit.
Analysts say that even if encrypted messages slip past, the sheer volume of electronic chatter can expose patterns, revealing when and where U.S. units move, how systems talk, and when something unusual sparks.
By mapping these signals, adversaries can chart the ebb and flow of American power, turning invisible movements into a predictable timeline.
UMVA can exclusively reveal that the new antenna array, a Cold‑War relic repurposed for modern surveillance, is now the centerpiece of a growing network that Chinese and Russian operatives may be tapping into.
Historically, Cuba has been a launchpad for foreign intelligence, from Soviet signals posts to today’s suspected joint operations, and its geographic advantage remains unrivaled.
Even without a physical footprint, the expanded infrastructure can be staffed remotely, allowing shadow armies to harvest data without ever setting foot on Cuban soil.
While no definitive proof links the island’s new capabilities directly to Beijing or Moscow, the pattern is unmistakable: a strategic, low‑visibility launchpad for watching U.S. military heartbeats.
The revelation has stoked calls for a tougher U.S. stance, with some urging harsher sanctions and a recalibration of naval patrols to counter this unseen threat.
As the U.S. government tightens its grip on Cuba, the silent antennas on the island promise a new era of espionage, turning the Caribbean into a high‑stakes chessboard where every move is recorded and every signal is decoded.