Cuban president says Raúl Castro involved in US talks that are in early
stages
[March 26, 2026]
By ANDREA RODRÍGUEZ
HAVANA (AP) — Former Cuban President Raúl Castro is involved in talks
between the island and the United States, Cuban President Miguel
Díaz-Canel said Wednesday.
The talks, which Diaz-Canel said are in the early stages, come at a time
of increasing tensions between the two nations, with Cuba plagued by
nationwide blackouts resulting from a crumbling power grid and an
ongoing oil blockade implemented by U.S. President Donald Trump, who has
threatened tariffs on any country that provides oil to Cuba. Trump
recently said he’d have “the honor of taking Cuba” soon.
The talks overall are being handled collectively by the Cuban
government, Díaz-Canel told Spanish leftist leader Pablo Iglesias in a
videotaped interview that lasted more than an hour and was shared by
state media. Though Diaz-Canel became president in 2018, 94-year-old
revolutionary leader, brother of Fidel Castro, is still considered the
most powerful person in the nation.
Iglesias was in Cuba as part of a delegation of some 600 activists from
33 countries who arrived last week to deliver humanitarian aid.
“A process of conversations that leads to an agreement is a long
process,” Díaz-Canel told Iglesias, who produced the interview for his
crowdfunded TV channel, Canal RED.
“First, we must build a channel for dialogue. Then, we must build common
agendas of interests for the parties, and the parties must demonstrate
their intention to move forward and truly commit to the program based on
the discussion of those agendas,” Díaz-Canel said.
In late January, Trump threatened tariffs on any country that sells or
provides oil to Cuba as he pushes for a change in the island’s political
model.

Although the initial threats were formally softened, the embargo has
remained in place, and the island has not received any fuel shipments in
the past three months.
Prolonged power outages and a near-paralysis of economic and social life
are the visible consequences on the island, which in the last week
experienced two nationwide blackouts that left millions without
electricity as Cuba’s power grid continues to crumble.
The U.S. has said that Cuba was in negotiations, and Trump has
threatened that he would take over the island soon.
Díaz-Canel was more nuanced in his response and said his officials and
those from the U.S. State Department “held recent talks.”
He also addressed speculation surrounding the role that Castro, would be
playing a role in these overture.

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Activists wave Cuban and Palestinian flags from the vessel Maguro,
arriving from Mexico with humanitarian aid as part of the "Nuestra
America," or Our America Convoy, in Havana Bay, Cuba, Tuesday, March
24, 2026. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)

“The other thing they’ve tried to speculate about is that there are
divisions within the leadership of the revolution,” Díaz-Canel said,
not clarifying who he was referring to.
Castro “is one of those who, along with me and in collaboration with
other branches of the (Communist) Party, the government, and the
State, has guided how we should conduct this dialogue process, if
this dialogue process takes place,” the president added.
He noted that Castro is “the historical leader of this revolution,
even though he has relinquished his responsibilities,” and that he
maintains a “prestige earned with the people” due to “historical
recognition that no one can deny.”
Raúl Castro, who succeeded his brother, Fidel, as president, led
historic talks with former U.S. President Barack Obama in 2014 that
led to the reopening of embassies and re-establishment of diplomatic
relations.
Trump has opposed such policy, tightening sanctions even further,
exacerbating a deep economic crisis to the extreme of the current
energy blockade.
Meanwhile, Francisco Pichón, resident coordinator of the United
Nations in Cuba, warned that if the situation continued to spiral it
could provoke a “humanitarian crisis”. Pichón and other officials
said it would require $94 million to address the island’s energy
crisis and hurricane damage from last year.
The crippled energy grid was slated to cut off 96,000 people, around
11,000 of them children, from getting surgeries they need, and cause
30,000 minors to fall behind of their vaccine schedules, he
estimated.
It's already cut around a million people who depend on water
deliveries from trucks, off from access to water.
The Un officials highlighted the desperate need for fuel to enter
Cuba, but also solar power as a potential solution to keep schools
and hospitals up and running and to pump water for irrigation.
“If the current situation continues and the country’s fuel reserves
are depleted, we do fear an accelerated deterioration with the
possible loss of lives,” said Francisco Pichón, Resident Coordinator
of the United Nations in Cuba.
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