Cuban president tells NBC he won't resign under US pressure
April 11, 2026 00:00:00
WASHINGTON, April 10 (AFP): Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel said Thursday that he would not resign under US pressure and called for open dialogue in his first television interview with an American broadcaster.
"We have a free sovereign state, a free state. We have self-determination and independence, and we are not subjected to the designs of the United States," Diaz-Canel told NBC News, according to their translation of his remarks.
"The US government that has implemented that hostile policy against Cuba has no moral to demand anything from Cuba," the 65-year-old leader added.
"The concept of revolutionaries giving up and stepping down -- it's not part of our vocabulary."
Washington has waged a pressure campaign on communist-ruled Cuba, imposing a virtual oil blockade on the island by threatening tariffs on any country that attempts to sell oil to the island.
Cuba has been in the throes of an energy crisis since January when its main supply from Venezuela was cut off with the ouster of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro.
The Caribbean island has been under a US trade embargo for more than six decades.
Trump has openly floated the idea of "taking" Cuba -- as he has with Greenland, Canada and Venezuela -- and his administration labels leaders in Havana a "threat" to US national security.