Cuba says it has ‘legitimate’ right to defend itself amid US threats

Cuba’s President Miguel Diaz-Canel has said that the island nation does not seek confrontation, but warned that United States military action against it would result in a “bloodbath”.
The president said in a social media post on Monday that Cuba is not a threat and does not have “aggressive intentions” against any country, but has the “absolute legitimate right” to defend itself if the US follows through on mounting military threats.
list of 3 items- list 1 of 3‘Absolutely no fuel’: Cuba hit by blackouts, protests amid power outages
- list 2 of 3Havana slams new Trump sanctions as ‘collective punishment’ of Cuban people
- list 3 of 3US issues new Cuba sanctions as UN experts warn of ‘energy starvation’
end of list
“The threats of military aggression against Cuba from the world’s greatest power are well-known,” Diaz-Canel said, in reference to the US. “The threat itself already constitutes an international crime. If it were to materialise, it would trigger a bloodbath with incalculable consequences, plus the destructive impact on regional peace and stability.”
The remarks from the Cuban president come one day after a report in the news outlet Axios, citing classified information shared with it, claiming that Cuba has amassed more than 300 drones and could launch an attack on US military forces or the US state of Florida.
The report, met with strong scepticism, comes amid months of threats from the administration of US President Donald Trump that suggest the US could topple the Cuban government through military force and an energy blockade that has squeezed the country’s already fragile economy and triggered nationwide blackouts.
The energy blockade has heaped further strain on the island’s population, which has long struggled with political repression from the Cuban government and economic restrictions imposed by the US.
Advertisement
On Monday, the Trump administration continued to ramp up its pressure campaign against the Cuban government, announcing sanctions on the island’s directorate of intelligence.
But the island has been under a wholesale US trade embargo since the 1960s, and it is unclear what the additional sanctions will accomplish.
Reactions in Cuba to the most recent US pressure campaign have ranged from defiance to exhaustion and protests.
“I know Cuba is a strong country. Cubans are very brave, and they are not going to find us unprepared,” 57-year-old Sandra Roseaux told the news service Reuters.
“If they come, they will have to fight, because Cuba will respond. My country, hungry or however it may be, will respond. It is better that they do not come because there will be a fight.”
Syndicated from Jamaica Inquirer · originally published .
Legal context · powered by Jurifi
Get the legal angle on this story. Pick a prompt and Jurifi's AI will explain it using Jamaican law.
AI replies are based on Jamaican law via Jurifi. Not legal advice.
Other coverage

US and Cuba intensify negotiations as its economic and social crisis deepens
Our Today
Caribbean leaders call for ‘de-escalation and dialogue’ amid US oil embargo on Cuba
The Guardian (Jamaica)
A humanitarian aid ship from Mexico docks in Havana as US-Cuba tensions escalate
Jamaica Gleaner
Humanitarian ship arrives with aid from Mexico, Uruguay
Jamaica Gleaner
Mark Wignall | The ghosts of Hurricane Melissa
Jamaica Gleaner