
Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla
Cuba's Foreign Minister since 2016; official voice of the government's sanctions and prisoner position.
Last refreshed: 12 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
How does Cuba's foreign minister respond when its president is on the US sanctions list?
Timeline for Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla
Condemned CUPET designation as a tightening of the economic and energy blockade
Cuba Dispatch: US sanctions Cuba's national oil companyAttended the Havana Cathedral mass at state level
Cuba Dispatch: Rubio meets Pope Leo XIV; Vatican track returnsCalled the order collective punishment violating the UN Charter
Cuba Dispatch: Trump pulls relatives into Cuba sanctionsMentioned in: Raul Castro stands at US Embassy venue
Cuba DispatchPosted on X and Cubadebate accusing Washington of extraterritorial fuel blockade
Cuba Dispatch: Havana accuses US of extraterritorial coercionWho is Cuba's foreign minister in 2026?
What did Cuba's foreign minister say about US sanctions in April 2026?
How long has Rodríguez Parrilla been Cuba's foreign minister?
Background
Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla is Cuba's Minister of Foreign Affairs, one of the longest-serving foreign ministers in Cuban history. He has held the post since 2016 and represents the hardline wing of the diplomatic establishment, consistently rejecting what Havana characterises as US preconditions for normalisation. His public statements serve as the official Cuban government framing for sanctions disputes and are closely read by UN special procedure holders, EU diplomatic missions in Havana, and diaspora monitoring organisations.
In April 2026 Rodríguez Parrilla accused Washington of 'creating confusion' to sustain a fuel blockade, describing US sanctions as 'extraterritorial' coercion. He was conspicuously silent on the 10 April US visit to Havana and the Castro-grandson back-channel, while his ministry's under-director confirmed the formal talks on 21 April. On 9 May he attended the Pope Leo XIV mass at Havana Cathedral as the Vatican humanitarian channel was simultaneously proposed in Rome. On 24 May MINREX formally protested the Raúl Castro indictment. By June 2026 his ministry faced compound pressure: President Díaz-Canel on the SDN list from 4 June, CUPET sanctioned on 11 June, and a military-to-military back-channel running in parallel.