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THU · 2026-05-21 · 10:04 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0521-78076
News/‘Homeland or death’: How Cuba would defend itself against a …
NSR-2026-0521-78076News Report·EN·Conflict

‘Homeland or death’: How Cuba would defend itself against a US attack

Amid heightened US-Cuba tensions following the indictment of former Cuban President Raul Castro, analysts suggest Havana is preparing for a potential US military operation. Cuba's defense doctrine, "War of All People," adopted after the Soviet Union's fall, mobilizes the entire civilian population for resistance through guerrilla warfare and local militias.

Urooba JamalAl JazeeraFiled 2026-05-21 · 10:04 GMTLean · CenterRead · 5 min
‘Homeland or death’: How Cuba would defend itself against a US attack
Al JazeeraFIG 01
Reading time
5min
Word count
1 237words
Sources cited
2cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Amid heightened US-Cuba tensions following the indictment of former Cuban President Raul Castro, analysts suggest Havana is preparing for a potential US military operation. Cuba's defense doctrine, "War of All People," adopted after the Soviet Union's fall, mobilizes the entire civilian population for resistance through guerrilla warfare and local militias. This strategy mirrors Cuba's successful civil defense system used to mitigate hurricane damage. While some analysts believe Cuba's military is obsolete against the US, others argue that the island's preparedness and the potential for widespread civilian resistance make it a difficult target, with Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel warning of a "bloodbath" in response to any US aggression.

Confidence 0.90Sources 2Claims 5Entities 12
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Conflict
National Security
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
2
Limited
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Raul Castro has been indicted by US federal prosecutors for conspiracy to kill US nationals, murder, and aircraft destruction related to a 1996 incident.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.95
02

Cuba's Civil Defence released a guide for families on protection against military aggression, detailing responsibilities and safety protocols.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.95
03

Cuba's defense doctrine, 'War of All People,' envisions resisting foreign invasion by mobilizing the entire civilian population.

factualHelen Yaffe
Confidence
0.90
04

A US military operation in Cuba could be imminent following the indictment of former Cuban President Raul Castro.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.80
05

Everyone in Cuba is trained militarily and incorporated into the national defense system.

factualHelen Yaffe
Confidence
0.70
§ 04

Full report

5 min read · 1 237 words
With Castro indicted, a US military operation in Cuba could be imminent, but Havana is not entirely defenceless, some analysts argue.A woman walks past a house displaying a poster of the late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, Cuba's former President Raul Castro and late Argentina-born revolutionary leader Ernesto 'Che' Guevara, in Havana, Cuba, on May 19, 2026 [Yamil Lage/AFP]Published On 21 May 2026Helen Yaffe, in her frequent, regular trips to Cuba for the last 30 years, remembers once when a Category Four hurricane barrelled its way to the island.The academic and podcaster was then living in a house with 13 other people, and when the storm hit, there was no panic – everyone already knew their role.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4Cuba hit by protests, blackouts amid oil shortagelist 2 of 4Cuba says it has ‘legitimate’ right to defend itself amid US threatslist 3 of 4Will Cuba be forced to accept the US president’s demands?list 4 of 4Is the US trying to force regime change in Cuba?end of listSome escorted elderly and vulnerable neighbours to shelters. Others prepared to clear debris once the winds subsided.Cuba’s system of national defence against such meteorological disasters has been lauded by the United Nations and the World Health Organization for minimising casualties despite frequent extreme weather.Now, Havana is seeking to apply a similar model to a different threat: a possible United States military confrontation, as President Donald Trump’s rhetoric towards Cuba intensified on Wednesday, with US federal prosecutors indicting former Cuban President Raul Castro in the sharpest escalation between the two countries in years.The indictment dates back to a 1996 incident in which four American men died when Cuban jets allegedly shot down aircraft operated by Cuban exiles. It charges Castro with conspiracy to kill US nationals, four counts of murder and two counts of aircraft destruction.Amid the tensions, on Saturday, Cuba’s Civil Defence released a multi-page guide titled The Family Guide for Protection Against Military Aggression, listing the responsibilities of families in the case of a US attack, as well as numerous safety protocols.The guide builds from Cuba’s defence doctrine, named War of All People, which it adopted after the fall of the Soviet Union, and envisions resisting foreign invasion by mobilising the entire civilian population through guerrilla warfare, local militias and civil defence networks, said Yaffe.“Everyone in Cuba is trained militarily and … incorporated into this system of national defence,” Yaffe, a professor of Latin American political economy at the University of Glasgow, and host of the podcast titled Cuba Analysis, told Al Jazeera.Castro’s indictment marks the latest escalation in a mounting pressure campaign that has included a surge in US surveillance flights off Cuba’s coast in recent months, a narrowly defeated US Senate move to block efforts to limit Trump’s authority to use military force against the island, and executive orders declaring Cuba a “significant threat” to US national security.And Trump has stated, plainly, that “Cuba is next”. A US military operation, therefore, could be imminent, analysts have said.While opinions diverge, some analysts said Cuba is not entirely defenceless despite being in the grips of blackouts, fuel shortages caused by a US oil blockade, and the loss of Venezuelan energy supplies following Nicolas Maduro’s abduction and ouster from Caracas.The Venezuela model ‘won’t work in Cuba’When US forces abducted Maduro on January 3, the operation’s speed stunned the world. But 32 of those killed in the fighting were Cuban – troops who put up “a really fierce resistance”, said Yaffe.Trump himself even acknowledged it, she said.For his part, Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel said on Monday that any US military action against Cuba would lead to a “bloodbath” and that the island does not represent a threat.“They talk about the Venezuelan model, and the question was, would they go for the Venezuelan model in Cuba? It won’t work in Cuba,” said Yaffe.“The narrative from the Cuban leaders, and actually the Cuban people, has been: ‘They think that was a fierce resistance? That was 32 Cubans. Imagine if they come here, [there] will be 10 million.’”Carlos Malamud, an Argentinian Latin America analyst at the Elcano Royal Institute in Madrid, Spain, agrees that Cuba presents a fundamentally different challenge than Venezuela.The Cuban military, he said, is better trained and better equipped than its Venezuelan counterpart.Sebastian Arcos, the Cuban-American director at Florida International University’s Institute for Cuban Studies, however, had a sharply different take on Havana’s armed forces.“Cuba’s military is obsolete. They have little chance of resisting the US,” he told Al Jazeera.“Cuba is a harder target [than Venezuela], not so much militarily, but because they have had time to prepare for a similar operation.”But another key variable is geography, the analysts agreed.The proximity of Cuba to the US means that Cuba’s “capacity of response”, including its air force, is far greater than anything the US faced in Caracas or in Iran — where the US and Israel have waged a war against Tehran since February 28, though a fragile ceasefire is in place — said Malamud.Any attack on Cuba, he said, carries with it the very real possibility of Cuban retaliation reaching American cities.“The capacity to provoke losses in the civilian population, and in the American cities, like Miami, for example, is higher,” he said.Arcos said Cuba could attack US civilian centres to try to turn US public opinion against the Trump administration.On Sunday, US outlet Axios published a report – citing unverified US intelligence – that Cuba had acquired 300 military drones, with plans to strike Guantanamo Bay, US naval vessels, and the US island city of Key West.But Yaffe and Malamud were sceptical of the intelligence, remarking that Cuba is not seeking a military confrontation. Arcos, however, said the Axios report “makes sense”, as Cuba has always maintained close ties to Russia and China, prioritising security even amid scarce resources.Cuba, meanwhile, had slammed the report as aimed at building justification for a US attack, and also stated that it has a right to self-defence against any US aggression.Differing domestic constraintsBeyond the military calculus, analysts point to a set of political constraints that make a US invasion of Cuba far more complicated than the Venezuela operation, and potentially fatal to Trump’s domestic standing.A migration surge to the US as a fallout of any attack on the island is chief among them, said Yaffe.“Any attack on Cuba would spark an immediate, uncontrollable mass migration, mainly through the sea,” Yaffe said.For a president whose political identity is built on anti-immigration, she argued, that consequence alone should give Washington pause, especially with midterm elections approaching in November.Meanwhile, Cuban Americans – many who are against the Cuban government and its system of socialism – have considerably more representation in American politics when compared with the Venezuelan diaspora, said Malamud.There is “no comparison”, in fact, he said.Venezuelan exiles – many who were opposed to Maduro’s government and his socialist predecessor Hugo Chavez – have largely only been in the US for the last decade, Malamud noted.Cuban Americans have been a political constituency for decades, with significant representation in Congress, and in the Trump administration itself, including with Marco Rubio as the current secretary of state.That community, he argued, would never accept a Venezuela-style resolution – one that preserved the existing power structure under new management, as former Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez’s assumption of power in Caracas did.For Cuban exiles, anything short of regime change away from the Castro-era system is “inadmissible”, said Malamud.
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

9 terms
cuba defence
1.00
us attack
1.00
war of all people
0.90
civil defence
0.80
military confrontation
0.70
raul castro
0.60
guerrilla warfare
0.50
national defence
0.50
us threats
0.40
§ 07

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