The United States has formally charged Cuba’s former President, Raúl Castro, in connection with the 1996 downing of two unarmed civilian aircraft operated by an anti-Castro exile group, marking a significant development in the longstanding diplomatic tensions between Washington and Havana.
Federal prosecutors in Miami announced the indictment against the 94-year-old former leader, accusing him of direct involvement in the decision that led to the fatal shootdown of planes flown by the Brothers to the Rescue organization. The incident occurred over international waters on February 24, 1996, resulting in the deaths of four volunteer pilots who regularly conducted missions to assist Cuban migrants stranded at sea.
Legal experts emphasize that while the indictment carries substantial symbolic significance, the prospect of Castro facing trial in a US court is highly unlikely due to the absence of an extradition agreement between the two countries.
In a revisitation of the decades-old aerial confrontation, the indictment centers on the actions of the Cuban air force that afternoon when MiG fighter jets intercepted three Cessna aircraft operated by the Miami-based exile group. Two of the planes were destroyed by air-to-air missiles shortly after interception, triggering international condemnation and prompting the United States to tighten its trade embargo against Cuba.
US prosecutors allege that Castro, who was Cuba’s Minister of the Revolutionary Armed Forces at the time, explicitly authorized the use of lethal force against the civilian planes despite their lack of military threat. The indictment claims the operation was carefully orchestrated to eliminate the exile group, which Havana accused of repeatedly violating its airspace to drop anti-government propaganda over the capital.
In response, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel vehemently denounced the indictment, describing it as a politically motivated action lacking legal merit, intended to appease hardline exile factions in Florida ahead of upcoming political events. Cuban officials maintain that the 1996 actions were a legitimate defense of national sovereignty, asserting that the civilian aircraft ignored multiple warnings and entered restricted military airspace on provocative missions.
This renewed judicial confrontation is expected to further freeze any remaining diplomatic engagement between the US and Cuba, deepening the historic geopolitical rift that has defined their relations for over sixty years.