As has been said, outside spin can help. The angle on the diagram though looks to be at least a few degrees less than 90, so it may be possible to cut in even without putting outside on it. (Without outside on cuts nearing 90 degrees the OB will tend to spin away from the pocket, important to keep in mind when the OB is not hanging in the pocket.) Yes, LD will help with this, because high squirt will actually widen the angle so it's a difficult balance as to when to use outside spin on these shots. You can also attempt the reverse which is aiming wide of the ball and using semi-masse to curve towards it, narrowing the angle. That's a last resort.
Outside spin should let you hit it at a reasonable pace, trickling the OB into the pocket and keeping some idea of where the CB will finish. If for some reason you have to hit a thin cut further from the pocket and can't risk underhitting it, sometimes where I have a few degrees under 90 I'll try to control the CB with backspin. The CB gets just enough kick when contacting a ball under 90 degrees that you can use high backspin to induce a curve on to the CB and try to bend it to a spot on the rail, also killing off some speed after contact. This is very difficult for getting precise position but if you're simply trying to avoid running hard into a cluster and not go five rails around the table, it can help you manage to get a narrow arc of control on the CB, killing it a little bit.
Still,depending on the table layout, you may decide to accept the risk of hitting this shot hard (past a certain point, added CB speed stops translating into added induced spin on the OB because of the complexity of friction between balls) so the OB has more speed than spin and won't curve away from the pocket.
But your #1 option is not leaving yourself this shot in the first place. If your opponent puts you in this spot, play safe when possible.