Former Cuban President Raul Castro indicted in US as Trump says Cuba ‘is next’

3 min readMay 20, 2026 09:25 PM IST

Former Cuban President Raul Castro has been indicted in the United States, a senior Trump administration official said on Wednesday, in a move that marks an escalation in Washington’s pressure campaign against the Caribbean island’s communist government.

The indictment comes as US President Donald Trump has pushed for a regime change in Cuba, where Castro’s communists have been in charge since his late brother Fidel Castro led a revolution in ⁠1959.

It represents ​the latest instance of Trump’s Justice Department using criminal prosecution to target his political adversaries at home and abroad. Historically, US indictments of foreign leaders are rare.

The US has effectively imposed a blockade on Cuba by threatening sanctions on countries supplying it ​with ​fuel, triggering power outages and exacerbating its worse crisis ⁠in decades.

Castro, 94, served as Cuba’s defense minister before assuming the presidency in 2008 after his brother fell ill. Fidel died in ‌2016.

Raul Castro stepped down from the presidency in 2018 but remains a powerful figure in Cuban politics.

Havana has not commented directly on the threat of an indictment, though Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez expressed defiance in public comments on May 15.

Story continues below this ad

“Despite the (U.S.) embargo, sanctions and threats of the use of force, Cuba continues on a path of sovereignty towards its socialist development,” Rodriguez ⁠said.

Trump says CUBA ‘is next’

Born ⁠in 1931, Raul Castro was a key figure alongside his older brother in the guerrilla war that toppled ⁠U.S.-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista. ‌He helped defeat the US-organized Bay of Pigs invasion in ​1961.

The filing of the criminal case against a ‌US adversary like Castro recalls the earlier drug-trafficking indictment of imprisoned former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, an ally of Havana’s.

The Trump administration cited that ‌indictment as a justification for ​the January ​3 raid ​on Caracas by the US military in which Maduro was captured and brought to New York to face the charges. ​He has pleaded not guilty.

Story continues below this ad

Trump says Cuba’s communist government ⁠is corrupt, and in March threatened that Cuba “is next” after Venezuela.
Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel said on Monday that any US military action against Cuba would lead ‌to a “bloodbath” and that ⁠the island does not represent a threat.