Who is Raúl Castro? A look at Cuba’s former defence minister and president after US murder charges
The former defence minister and president of Cuba has been charged with murder by the US for his role in the downing of two planes in 1996.
Raúl Castro was Cuba’s defence minister for 49 years and also the country’s president for 12 years, serving until 2018, after his brother Fidel stepped down because of illness.
Mr Castro is 94 and no longer holds any official title, but he still wields enormous power, experts say, particularly over the military, and he has had a hand in secret negotiations with the Trump administration over the current stand-off between Havana and Washington.
Cuban state media still refers to him reverentially as “the leader of the Cuban Revolution” who, along with Fidel, helped to lead the 1959 uprising that toppled a US-aligned dictator.
Sign up to The Nightly's newsletters.
Get the first look at the digital newspaper, curated daily stories and breaking headlines delivered to your inbox.
By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.Mr Castro is frail, has poor hearing and difficulty speaking, but he still attends important events and was last seen in public on May 1 wearing his military uniform at an International Workers’ Day parade.
Despite being known as a heavy drinker earlier in life with a penchant for shots of neat vodka (he studied in Moscow and was an admirer of the former Soviet Union), Mr Castro has aged remarkably well, his former chief of staff, Alcibiades Hidalgo, who defected to Florida by raft in 2002, told The New York Times.
“The fact remains that as long as he is alive, he will continue to be a decisive factor in the country’s trajectory,” Mr Hidalgo said.
While Fidel Castro, who died in 2016, was the revolution’s charismatic leader, Mr Castro seemed content to stay in the background.
“Raúl and Fidel were dramatically different,” said Brian Latell, a former longtime Cuba analyst for the CIA.
“Fidel was the director, he was the temperamental and creative one. Raúl did all the backstage work.”
After the revolution, it was Raúl who built the new Revolutionary Armed Forces, which repelled the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion organised by the CIA.

When Fidel declared Cuba to be a communist state in 1961, Raúl did the heavy lifting to organise the Cuban Communist Party.
As defence minister under Fidel, Raúl guided the creation of GAESA, an enormous military conglomerate that includes hotels, stores, gas stations and many other businesses. It is considered the most powerful economic force in Cuba.
Experts once regarded Raúl Castro as a potential change agent after he relaxed some of the Cuban government’s most rigorous communist economic policies, for example, by allowing Cubans to buy and sell homes and vehicles.

In 2015, he restored diplomatic relations with the United States and a year later welcomed President Barack Obama to Havana.
But he kept up the Communist Party’s tight political control over the island’s one-party system and maintained the repressive state security apparatus.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
© 2026 The New York Times Company
Originally published on The New York Times
