Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel Issues Dire Warning Amid Reports of Drone Threats, Guantánamo Concerns, and Escalating U.S. Pressure Campaign
Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel issued one of Havana’s sharpest warnings in decades Monday, declaring that any U.S. military attack against Cuba would unleash a “bloodbath” with potentially catastrophic consequences for regional peace and global stability.
The comments come as tensions between Washington and Havana continue escalating under President Donald Trump, whose administration has dramatically intensified sanctions, economic pressure, and military rhetoric targeting the communist-led island nation.
“The threats of military aggression against Cuba from the biggest military power on the planet are already known,” Díaz-Canel wrote on social media Monday. “To make good on those threats would provoke a bloodbath of incalculable consequences.”
The warning followed reports that U.S. intelligence officials believe Cuba may have acquired hundreds of military drones and discussed potential strikes against strategic American targets, including the U.S. naval base at Guantánamo Bay Naval Base, military vessels in the Caribbean, and even locations near Key West.
Cuban officials have strongly denied those allegations, accusing the Trump administration and allied media outlets of manufacturing a false pretext for military intervention. Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla insisted Havana “does not represent a threat” to the United States and framed Cuba’s actions as legitimate national self-defense under international law.
The growing crisis reflects one of the most dangerous periods in U.S.-Cuba relations since the Cold War era.
The Trump administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign has intensified economic restrictions on Cuba while simultaneously increasing military and intelligence activity throughout the Caribbean region. Following the collapse of Venezuelan oil support to Havana, Cuba’s fragile energy infrastructure has suffered widespread blackouts, fuel shortages, and growing humanitarian pressures.
Trump himself has repeatedly suggested that Cuba could become the next major geopolitical target of his administration’s foreign policy agenda.



















