Cuba's president fires back at Trump over takeover remarks
Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel vowed "unbreakable resistance" against a potential US takeover after Donald Trump's remarks about "taking Cuba," amidst heightened economic pressure and Cuba's severe economic crisis.
- World
- DPA
- Published Date: 09:18 | 18 March 2026
Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel has fired back at comments made by US President Donald Trump about a possible takeover of Cuba.
On Monday, Trump told reporters he thinks he will have the "honour of taking Cuba."
"I do believe I'll be ... having the honour of taking Cuba. That would be good. That's a big honour," he said during an executive order signing at the White House.
On Tuesday, Díaz-Canel said the US would face "unbreakable resistance" if it attempted a takeover.
In a post on X, Díaz-Canel said the US publicly threatened Cuba, almost daily, to overthrow the constitutional order by force.
"This is the only way to explain the fierce economic war being waged as collective punishment against the entire people."
For weeks, Trump has been repeating that Cuba is on the brink of collapse. Under Trump, Washington has increased economic pressure on Cuba, aiming to cut off the flow of foreign currency and oil to the Caribbean island.
The pressure intensified after US authorities carried out an operation in January in which Venezuela's president, Nicolás Maduro, was arrested in the capital Caracas and taken to the US.
The move deprived Havana of one of its most important allies, which had long supported the island, particularly through oil supplies, amid the decades-long US trade embargo with Cuba.
Currently, Cuba is in one of its most severe economic crises since the revolution led by Fidel Castro in 1959.