Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez has launched a scathing critique of the Nobel Peace Prize selection process, characterizing the prestigious award as a political tool favoring United States allies. Through his official Twitter account, Rodriguez asserted that the Norwegian Nobel Committee members—appointed by a NATO-aligned parliament—systematically transform the prize into recognition for “docile US allies” while simultaneously providing a platform for criticizing governments Washington finds inconvenient.
The seasoned diplomat drew upon Cuba’s direct experience with over six decades of American economic blockade to question the committee’s consistent exclusion of Cuba’s Medical Brigades from consideration. These medical professionals have received repeated nominations for their humanitarian work worldwide, yet remain unrecognized by the Nobel committee.
Rodriguez highlighted what he characterized as profound hypocrisy, noting the committee’s silence regarding aggressive US actions against Venezuela while enthusiastically presenting awards that allegedly contradict peace principles. He specifically referenced controversial past laureates including Henry Kissinger, Shimon Peres, and more recent recipients whose recognition coincided with US Secretary of State initiatives that Rodriguez claims promote military intervention in Venezuela.
The Foreign Minister concluded that such demonstrated “double standard” fundamentally disqualifies the committee from delivering authoritative lectures on democratic values, arguing that the prize has become complicit in actions directly opposed to genuine peacekeeping efforts.
