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Cuba Dispatch
28MAY

State Department met Castro grandson off-track

4 min read
08:42UTC

A senior US official took a separate Havana meeting with 41-year-old Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro on 10 April, addressing the family that runs Cuba's army outside the elected government track.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Washington met the family that controls Cuba's security services separately from the government that runs its parliament.

A senior State Department official held a separate Havana meeting on the same Friday with Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro, age 41, a grandson of former President Raúl Castro who holds no government position. The encounter ran outside the formal state-to-state talks with Cuban foreign ministry officials. Axios broke the back-channel detail; Al Jazeera and the Spokesman-Review corroborated the basic outline. Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla has not addressed the meeting publicly.

Diplomatic protocol distinguishes sharply between meeting Cuba's deputy foreign minister, which is conventional state-to-state engagement, and meeting a former president's 41-year-old grandson outside any government title. The first registers as recognition; the second is intelligence-style probing of a parallel power structure. Cuba's post-2018 transition formally moved presidential power to Miguel Díaz-Canel but left the Castro family in command of GAESA (the military's holding conglomerate), the FAR (Cuba's armed forces) and the intelligence services. The Communist Party general-secretary track now runs through Díaz-Canel; the security-services track does not.

The choice of counterpart matters. Washington selected a Castro family member who carries the lineage but no formal title, which is the configuration that lets the contact be registered without conferring official status. The back-channel bypasses the Holy See route that produced Cuba's first 2026 prisoner-release announcement and operates alongside the formal track represented publicly by Alejandro Garcia del Toro's 21 April confirmation. Rodríguez Parrilla's mid-April "extraterritorial" framing of US sanctions included no acknowledgement of any contact with Washington, consistent with the Cuban government not having been briefed on the back-channel itself.

Any future Castro-family-mediated transition that marginalised the Díaz-Canel structure now carries a higher political price domestically; Havana cannot publicly disavow the grandson without rejecting the lineage that anchors the security services. Washington has tested whether the Castro circle would consider a transition deal independently of the elected structure, and Havana has yet to answer.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

On the same day a US government plane met Cuban officials, a senior American diplomat also had a private meeting with a 41-year-old Cuban man named Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro. He is the grandson of former President Raúl Castro and holds no government job. Cuba runs two parallel authority structures. The elected government under President Díaz-Canel handles ministerial decisions. The Castro family and the military, through GAESA, control 60 per cent of the hard-currency economy and the armed forces. Washington talking to the family separately from the government tests whether the people who command the army and run the big companies would accept a deal the official government might sign.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Cuba's dual power structure originates in the 1976 constitution's design, which placed the Communist Party above the state apparatus and the FAR outside routine civilian oversight. When Raúl Castro transferred the presidency to Díaz-Canel in 2018, he retained the Party First Secretary position until 2021.

GAESA's 60 per cent share of the hard-currency economy remained in military hands through the transition. Washington's choice to probe the family track reflects the assessment that any transition deal negotiated with the Díaz-Canel government alone would not bind the security services.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    The Rodríguez Castro meeting is the first documented instance of Washington directly contacting a Castro family member without government credentials since 1959, establishing a precedent that the family network is an independent diplomatic target.

    Long term · 0.7
  • Risk

    If the Cuban government was not briefed on the back-channel, discovery of the meeting risks fracturing the US-facing diplomatic track: Rodríguez Parrilla's public silence may be ignorance rather than tacit approval.

    Short term · 0.65
  • Consequence

    The Holy See channel, which produced the 13 March prisoner releases (ID:2443), has been effectively bypassed by a direct State Department approach that did not coordinate through the Vatican.

    Short term · 0.72
First Reported In

Update #2 · Two Cuba policies, one fortnight

The Spokesman-Review· 27 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
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State Department met Castro grandson off-track
Meeting a Castro relative with no government title alongside the formal MINREX talks signals Washington is probing the security-services lineage in parallel with Díaz-Canel.
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