HAVANA (AP) — Cuban officials on Monday lowered flags before dawn to mourn 32 security officers they say were killed in the U.S. weekend strike in Venezuela, the island nation's closest ally, as residents here wonder what the capture of President Nicolás Maduro means for their future.

The two governments are so close that Cuban soldiers and security agents were often the Venezuelan president's bodyguards, and Venezuela's petroleum has kept the economically ailing island limping along for years. Cuban authorities over the weekend said the 32 had been killed in the surprise attack but have given no further details.

President Donald Trump told reporters on board Air Force One on Sunday that he's offered to send U.S. troops to Mexico because "the cartels are running Mexico.” He also said he doesn't think the U.S. will take action in Cuba because "the country is going down."

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