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Cuba’s president says he ‘will not step down’ in defiant NBC interview – National

Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said he will not step down in his first interview with American network NBC News’ Meet the mediaairing part of the interview on Thursday.

In the nearly five-minute clip — part of a longer interview scheduled to air Sunday — reporter Kristen Welker asked Díaz-Canel if he “would be willing to step down if it meant saving Cuba.”

Before answering, Díaz-Canel, 65, asked Welker if he had ever asked that question of any other president in the world.


Click to play video: 'Trump's Cuba threats raise tensions around the world'


Trump’s threats to Cuba raise tensions around the world


He asked: “Is that a question from you, or is that from the State Department of the US government?”

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“In Cuba, the people in leadership positions are not chosen by the US government, and they have no authority from the US government. We have a free independent country, a free country. We are self-governing and independent, and we are not subject to the designs of the United States,” said Díaz-Canel.

“The idea that revolutionaries give up and step down – it’s not part of our vocabulary.

Díaz-Canel said he became president not because of “personal ambitions or business ambitions or party ambitions,” but because of the mandate of the people.

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“If the people of Cuba understand that I am not fit for the position, I have no reason to be here, I should not be holding this position of president, I will answer them,” he said.

Díaz-Canel also accused the US government of using a “hostile policy” against Cuba and said that “it is immoral to demand anything from Cuba.”

“I think the most important thing would be for them to understand and take this critical position, an honest position, and realize how much it has cost the Cuban people – and how much it has deprived the American people of a normal relationship with the Cuban people,” he added.

Díaz-Canel said that Cuba is interested in entering into negotiations and negotiating any topic without conditions, “not seeking changes in our political system as we do not want changes in the American system, about which we have many doubts.”

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‘Cuba is next,’ Trump said in a speech praising US military success


The Cuban president’s comments come as the situation between Cuba and the United States is still tense. US President Donald Trump called Cuba a “failing nation” last month, and said he would “have the right to take over Cuba” soon.


In February, Trump also said the US was negotiating with Havana and suggested it might “take a more friendly stance,” without sharing details on what that would mean.

“The Cuban government is talking to us,” Trump said. “They have no money. They have nothing right now. But they are talking to us, and maybe we will take Cuba as a friend.”

In response to Díaz-Canel’s comments on Thursday, a White House official said the Trump administration is talking to Cuba and that the country’s leaders “want to make a deal and they have to make a deal.”

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“Cuba is a failing country whose rulers have had serious problems with the loss of support from Venezuela,” a White House official told NBC News on Thursday.


Click to play video: 'Trump proposes 'friendly takeover of Cuba''


Trump proposes ‘friendly takeover of Cuba’


Last month, Trump said he might make a deal with Cuba or take other measures, following protests in the island nation’s capital as its people grapple with power outages, fuel shortages and economic turmoil.

Díaz-Canel confirmed that the country is in talks with the US

“These talks were aimed at finding solutions through dialogue to the differences between the two countries,” Díaz-Canel said in a video broadcast on state television, adding that he hoped the talks would remove the adversaries “from the conflict.”

Oscar Pérez-Oliva Fraga, Cuba’s Deputy Prime Minister, said in an interview in Havana that “Cuba is open to having fluid commercial relations with American companies” and “Cubans living in the United States and their descendants.”

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– With files from Global News by Rachel Goodman and The Associated Press

&copy 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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