A federal grand jury has indicted 94-year-old former Cuban President Raúl Castro on murder charges in the 1996 downing of two small planes by a Cuban fighter jet while Castro was in charge of the country’s armed forces, U.S. authorities announced Wednesday.
The indictment marks the latest escalation in the Trump administration’s pressure campaign against Cuba, which gained traction after U.S. forces captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro — a crucial ally of Cuba’s communist government — in January. The subsequent cutoff of Venezuelan oil has left Cuba on the verge of a humanitarian crisis.
The prosecution of Castro, who succeeded his brother Fidel as the island nation’s leader, stems from Cuba’s shootdown of two planes on a humanitarian mission over the Florida Straits, an episode laden with significance for the politically powerful Cuban-American diaspora. The planes, operated by the Miami-based exile group Brothers to the Rescue, were patrolling the waterway for refugees fleeing the island by raft when they were shot down by a Cuban MiG-29, killing four people.
U.S. officials denounced the Cuban government, which denied wrongdoing, alleging the planes violated Cuban airspace and were part of an effort to unseat the communist regime.
The group’s founder, José Basulto, is a Cuban-born, CIA-trained veteran of the Bay of Pigs invasion who has acknowledged that his group’s planes had also been used to drop leaflets encouraging an uprising and has maintained he had the right to fly into Cuban airspace. As recently as Feb. 24, the 30th anniversary of the encounter, he called for Castro’s indictment over the downing of the planes.
Castro served as Cuba’s defense minister at the time. He formally succeeded Fidel Castro as president of Cuba’s Communist Party in 2008 and stayed in power until stepping down in 2018, though he has remained highly influential. Fidel Castro died in 2016.
President Donald Trump’s push for criminal accountability three decades later could lay the foundation for military intervention in the country, which Trump has floated as his approval ratings decline over his handling of the Iran war and the U.S. economy.
U.S. threats of heavy tariffs on any country that exports oil to Cuba and the nation’s loss of critical Venezuelan oil since Maduro’s ouster have deepened an already catastrophic energy crisis, plunging the island and its people into dayslong blackouts and upending its economy. The Trump administration is seeking to use that leverage to force Cuba to implement major political and economic reforms.
In a message marking Cuban Independence Day, hours before the Castro indictment came down, Secretary of State Marco Rubio denied that the U.S. is responsible for deepening the island’s energy crisis.
“The reason you are forced to survive 22 hours a day without electricity is not due to an oil ‘blockade’ by the U.S.,” Rubio said in a video message that was translated from Spanish to English by the State Department. “The real reason you don’t have electricity, fuel, or food is because those who control your country have plundered billions of dollars, but nothing has been used to help the people.”








