Cuba’s 79-Year-Old Folk Singer Now Armed for an Invasion

HAVANA, March 20 (Reuters) – Cuba’s armed ⁠forces ⁠presented 79-year-old folk singer Silvio ⁠Rodriguez with an AKM war rifle and a ceremonial ​replica on Friday, grateful for his social media post that he was prepared to ‌take up arms against any ‌U.S. invasion.

Rodriguez has long been a symbol of the Cuban revolution, rising ⁠to fame ⁠with the “nueva trova” musical style of the 1960s.

“I demand my AKM, ​if they throw down. And mind you, I’m being totally serious,” Rodriguez posted on Wednesday, following a series of provocative statements from U.S. President Donald Trump about how ​he might “take” Cuba and that he could do “whatever I want” with the ⁠country.

Two days ⁠after his post, Rodriguez ⁠appeared ​on state television with Cuba’s senior military leaders and President Miguel Diaz-Canel, who was ​dressed in green military ⁠fatigues.

The AKM, a successor to the Soviet-made AK-47, is the regulation rifle of the Cuban armed forces. Rodriguez received a functioning weapon and a framed replica.

Cuba, stuck in an economic crisis and subject to a U.S. oil blockade, ⁠vows to resist any possible intervention from the far superior U.S. military.

“While the ⁠threats and perfidy of the United States government repeatedly loom over our homeland… Silvio hasn’t just sung; he has struck like thunder with his earnestly written words – a call to national conscience,” General Victor Rojo, head of the armed forces political directorate, told the ceremony.

Cuban state television has been promoting the need for military readiness, with near-nightly segments showing adult civilians of all ages and sizes training alongside the ⁠armed forces, part of the Communist government’s “War of the Entire People” strategy to deploy the masses if needed.

Diaz-Canel has also shown defiance.

“Faced with the worst-case scenario, Cuba has one certainty: any external aggressor will encounter ​an impenetrable resistance,” he said on X.

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta ​in Havana; Editing by Nia Williams)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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