With the US pressuring Cuba, a Castro known as âthe Crabâ is making appearances. Hereâs why it matters
With the US pressuring Cuba, a Castro known as âthe Crabâ is making appearances. Hereâs why it matters
Mauricio Torres, Michael Rios, CNNSun, March 15, 2026 at 3:43 PM UTC
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Cuba's Colonel Raul Guillermo Rodriguez Castro, grandson of Raul Castro, attends the funeral of the 32 Cuban soldiers killed during the US incursion in Venezuela at Colon cemetery in Havana on January 16, 2026. - Yamil Lage/AFP/Getty Images
RaĂșl Guillermo RodrĂguez Castro, grandson of former Cuban President RaĂșl Castro, appeared for the first time alongside Cuban President Miguel DĂaz-Canel at two public events on Friday, raising questions, according to analysts, about his role in Cubaâs leadership as the island faces calls for regime change from the United States.
On Friday morning, RodrĂguez Castro took part in a meeting DĂaz-Canel held with leaders of the Communist Party of Cuba and the Council of Ministers. Later, he attended a press conference where DĂaz-Canel addressed the islandâs social and economic crises and confirmed that his government had spoken with the US about the pressure Washington has maintained on Havana since the 1960s and intensified in recent months.
RodrĂguez Castroâs appearances came weeks after reports surfaced that he has allegedly been in talks with the US about the islandâs future.
According to Axios, the discussions were held with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio while bypassing official Cuban government channels.
CNN has not been able to verify this information with the US State Department or the Cuban government.
Still, some analysts and many Cubans believe RodrĂguez Castro is gaining public prominence and could even assume a leadership role in the event of a change of government, as Cuba faces immense political and economic pressure from the US.
How Cuba crisis deepened
Cubaâs communist government, weakened by decades of US sanctions and economic mismanagement, is facing one of its most severe crises in years, with the country edging toward a humanitarian emergency. Power outages are widespread, hospitals are cutting back on surgeries, shortages of fuel and food are worsening, while tourism declines.
The situation in Cuba deteriorated further after the January 3 US operation that removed Venezuelan leader NicolĂĄs Maduro, whose government had long supplied the island with heavily subsidized oil. Severing Venezuelaâs relationship with Cuba is part of Washingtonâs broader strategy of toppling Havanaâs communist-run government. Since mid-December, Washington has blockaded Venezuela from shipping oil to Cuba, economically strangling the island.
US officials say the raid to capture Maduro also exposed Cubaâs vulnerabilities, killing dozens of Cuban security personnel assigned to protect Maduro while US forces suffered no casualties.
Washingtonâs decision to leave some of Maduroâs allies in power in Venezuela, including allowing Vice President Delcy Rodriguez to be acting president, signaled that the Trump administration may be willing to strike deals with Cuban rival factions rather than seek total regime change.
US officials had already been quietly holding hush-hush meetings with Venezuelan elites before Maduroâs capture and are now reportedly exploring similar contacts with influential figures in Cuba.
His grandfatherâs bodyguard
RodrĂguez Castro, 41, is the son of one of RaĂșl Castroâs daughters, DĂ©bora Castro EspĂn, and Luis Alberto RodrĂguez LĂłpez-Calleja, a general who headed the Business Administration Group (GAESA), a consortium of companies under military command. RodrĂguez LĂłpez-Calleja, who died in 2022, was one of the former presidentâs closest confidants, the reported.
RodrĂguez LĂłpez-Calleja was âa man RaĂșl Castro trusted completely,â said SebastiĂĄn Arcos, director of the Cuban Research Institute at Florida International University. After RodrĂguez LĂłpez-Callejaâs death, Arcos told CNN, his son began to climb the ranks, taking charge of his grandfatherâs security during his presidency, from 2008 to 2018.
âRaĂșl Guillermo, âel Cangrejoâ (the Crab), ⊠became head of RaĂșlâs personal guard, his personal security detail,â Arcos said. âEventually, he became head of what would be the Cuban equivalent of the Secret Service.â
Photos from Reuters show RodrĂguez Castro guarding his 94-year-old grandfather at various times, including during meetings with the late Pope Francis or high-ranking Russian officials.
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RodrĂguez Castro is widely known in Cuba by the nickname âRaulito,â a nickname meaning âLittle RaĂșl.â
RodrĂguez Castro is also a grand-nephew of Fidel Castro, who led the Cuban Revolution in 1959 and then was president of the country from 1976 to 2008. He left office due to health problems and died in 2016.
International relations expert Fausto Pretelin noted that RodrĂguez Castro has no known history within the Communist Party of Cuba. Diana Correa, director of the international relations program at TecnolĂłgico de Monterrey, believes that his appearance at DĂaz-Canelâs public events on Friday points to both the influence RaĂșl Castro continues to wield in Cuban politics and the trust the former president has in his grandson.
âWhat strikes me is ⊠that itâs happening publicly now, but what we should really ask ourselves â and itâs very difficult to know the answer â is how long he has been acting as this channel of communication,â she said.
Questions about Cubaâs future
Another of the former presidentâs closest associates, Arcos said, is his son Alejandro Castro EspĂn, long seen by many Cubans as a possible successor after Castro stepped down in 2018.
âThey participate in all these high-level government meetings, even though neither of them holds a government position. They are RaĂșl Castroâs eyes and ears on everything that happens at the government level. Therefore, it wouldnât be surprising if they were RaĂșl Castroâs interlocutors in a supposed negotiation with the United States,â he said.
CNN has reached out to the Cuban presidency for more information about the current roles of RodrĂguez Castro and Castro EspĂn.
There have been multiple media reports claiming Rubio and RodrĂguez Castro have spoken in secret, something neither has confirmed publicly.
Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a Caribbean Community gathering in St. Kitts and Nevis in late February, Rubio referred to the crisis in Cuba.
âCuba needs to change. It needs to change. And it doesnât have to change all at once. It doesnât have to change from one day to the next. Everyone is mature and realistic here,â Rubio said on February 25.
âAnd they need to make dramatic reforms. And if they want to make those dramatic reforms that open the space for both economic and eventually political freedom for the people of Cuba, obviously the United States would love to see that,â he added.
Correa emphasized that amid the crisis in Cuba, many citizens see RodrĂguez Castroâs increased presence as an indication that a change of government may be coming, framed within talks with the US.
âMany are saying right now that it is indeed a generational shift, taking the reins, even if itâs somewhat behind the scenes, but still operational control,â she said. âBy having Castro negotiating, at least externally it seems they are sending the signal that the negotiation is serious because this person represents all state power,â she concluded.
CNNâs Jonny Hallam contributed reporting.
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