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HAVANA — Cubans expressed their shock and indignation after the United States indicted former president Raúl Castro on murder charges, a stunning new step in President Donald Trump's pressure on the communist state.
The charges against the ex-leader, who at 94 years old remains influential in Cuban politics, have fuelled speculation that Trump will try to topple the crisis-hit island, culminating a US pressure campaign which has imposed months of crippling oil blockades.
Authorities in Cuba and abroad slammed the indictment, the latest step-up in Trump's international interventions after the Iran war, the US toppling of Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro and threats against Greenland.

A sign on a lectern reads "Republican Party of Miami-Dade County, Raul Castro Indicted" as people gather outside Versailles Restaurant in support of charges announced by US federal prosecutors against the former Cuban president in Miami, Florida, on May 20, 2026. (AFP)
"I do not agree with a war by the United States here in Cuba," she told AFP.
"It's inhumane, because there will be deaths, There will be many deaths."
Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel wrote on X that the charges carry no legal basis and "add to the file they are fabricating to justify the folly of a military aggression against Cuba."
China led international reaction to the charge, saying it "firmly supports" Cuba and urging the United States to deescalate tensions with the country.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun told a press briefing Thursday that Washington "should stop brandishing the sanctions stick and the judicial stick against Cuba and stop threatening force at every turn."
Beijing's comments came after the USS Nimitz aircraft carrier and its escort warships entered the Caribbean Sea, the military's Southern Command said on Wednesday.
"Welcome to the Caribbean, Nimitz Carrier Strike Group!" the Southern Command posted on X, alongside a video flaunting the ship's capabilities.
Trump has hailed the indictment as a "very big moment" but played down prospects of moving on Cuba.
"There won't be escalation. I don't think there needs to be. Look, the place is falling apart. It's a mess, and they sort of lost control," he told reporters on Wednesday.
Analysts were quick to draw comparisons with Venezuela, where the US government seized on a domestic indictment to justify military action in January that toppled and seized president Maduro, a staunch ally of Cuba.
"The idea is to say, we can do to you what we did to Nicolas Maduro," Christopher Sabatini, senior fellow for Latin America at Chatham House told AFP.
"The military would certainly defend Cuba" in the event of US military intervention, Sabatini said.
"Whether the people would or not, it's difficult to say," he added.