The Cuban Revolution holds out against US imperialism : Peoples Dispatch


In January 2026, US President Donald Trump declared Cuba to be an “unusual and 
extraordinary threat” to US security, a designation that allows the United 
States government to use sweeping economic restrictions traditionally reserved 
for national security adversaries. The US blockade against Cuba began in the 
1960s, right after the Cuban Revolution of 1959, but has tightened over the 
years. Without any mandate from the United Nations Security Council (which 
permits sanctions under strict conditions) the United States has operated an 
illegal, unilateral blockade that tries to force countries from around the 
world to stop doing basic commerce with Cuba. The new restrictions focus on 
oil. The United States government has threatened tariffs and sanctions on any 
country that sells or transports oil to Cuba.

On January 3, the United States attacked Venezuela and kidnapped President 
Nicolás Maduro Moros and National Assembly deputy Cilia Flores. As 150 US 
military aircraft sat above Caracas, the United States informed the Venezuelan 
government that if they did not concede to a list of demands, the US would 
essentially convert downtown Caracas to Gaza City. The remainder of the 
government, with no leverage in the conversation, had to effectively make a 
tactical compromise and accept the US demands. One of these demands was that 
Venezuela cease to export oil to Cuba. In 2025, Venezuela contributed about 34% 
of Cuba’s total oil demand. With Venezuelan oil out of the picture in the short 
run, Cuba already anticipated a serious problem.

But this was not all. Mexico supplied 44% of Cuba’s imported crude oil in 2025. 
Pressure now mounted from Washington on Mexico City to cease its oil exports to 
Cuba, which would then mean that almost 80% of Cuba’s oil imports would 
disappear. In a phone call between Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum and 
Trump, he claimed that he told her to stop selling oil to Cuba, but she denied 
that, saying that the two presidents only talked in broad terms about US-Mexico 
relations. Either way, the pressure on Mexico to stop its oil shipments has 
been considerable. Sheinbaum has stressed that Mexico must be permitted to make 
sovereign decisions and that the Mexican people will not buckle under US 
pressure. Cutting fuel to Cuba would cause a humanitarian crisis, Sheinbaum 
said.

Trump’s savage policy has effectively cut off much of Cuba’s oil imports, which 
has created a major energy crisis on the island of eleven million people. There 
are rolling blackouts, fuel shortages for hospitals, water systems, and 
transportation, and rationing of electricity. Due to the lack of aviation fuel, 
several commercial airlines (such as Air Canada) have stopped their flights to 
Havana.

The United Nations has warned that the US pressure campaign (especially the 
policy to target fuel) threatens Cuba’s food and water supplies, hospitals, 
schools, and basic services. UN officials, including the UN Special Rapporteur 
on human rights in Cuba, have condemned the US tightening of the blockade as a 
measure that directly harms ordinary citizens. They pointed out that 
restrictions make it harder for hospitals to obtain essential medicines, 
dialysis clinics to operate, and medical equipment to reach patients, worsening 
the health crisis on the island. The Special Rapporteur described the policy as 
“punitive and disproportionate”, emphasizing that it violates international law 
and deepens socio-economic hardships. The UN has urged the United States to 
lift sanctions and prioritize humanitarian exemptions, stressing that dialogue 
and cooperation (not coercive measures) are necessary to protect Cuban lives 
and human rights.

A group of United Nations human rights experts condemned Trump’s executive 
order as a “serious violation of international law” and “a grave threat to a 
democratic and equitable international order.” They argued that Trump’s order 
seeks to coerce Cuba and third states by threatening trade sanctions, and that 
such extraterritorial economic measures risk causing severe humanitarian 
consequences. Their statement made it clear that no right under international 
law permits a State to impose economic penalties on third States for lawful 
trade relations, and they called on the Trump administration to rescind the 
illegal order. The UN General Assembly has voted overwhelmingly against the 
blockade every year since 1992, often with only the US and Israel opposed.

The Blockade by the US has had a grave impact on Cuba’s development paradigm. 
Since the start of the Blockade over sixty years ago, the US has cost Cuba 171 
billion USD or if adjusted for the price of gold, 2.10 trillion USD. Between 
March 2024 and February 2025, the Cuban government estimates that the Blockade 
caused about 7.5 billion USD in damages, a 49% increase since the previous 
period. If you take the 171 billion USD number, the Cuban people lose 20.7 
million USD per day or 862,568 USD per hour. These losses are grievous for a 
small country that attempts to build a rational society rooted in socialist 
values.

Response from Havana

Cuba’s President Miguel Díaz-Canel has strongly condemned the tightened US 
measures as an “economic war” and has argued that the US policy is designed to 
weaken Cuba’s sovereignty. The government calls this an “energy blockade” and 
emphasizes that the shortages on the island are a direct result of US coercive 
policies. In reaction, the Cuban Revolution has implemented emergency plans, 
including fuel rationing to prioritize essential services such as hospitals, 
water systems, and public transportation. Cuba has also announced state 
directives to manage diminished energy supplies, including shifts toward 
alternative and renewable energy sources where feasible. The Chinese government 
has donated equipment for large-scale solar parks to be built in Artemisa, 
Granma, Guantánamo, Holguín, Las Tunas, and Pinar del Río. In the long-term, 
China will assist Cuba to build 92 solar farms to add 2,000 megawatts of solar 
capacity. To assist households in remote areas, the Chinese government has sent 
5,000 solar kits for rooftop energy harvesting. Fuel from Mexico and Russia, as 
well as other countries is now on the way to Cuba. Trump’s policy of isolation 
has not fully succeeded.

The Cuban government said that it is in touch with Washington, but not holding 
direct high-level talks yet. President Díaz-Canel has said that his government 
would speak to the United States but only under three important conditions. 
First, that the dialogue will be respectful, serious, and without pressure or 
preconditions. Second, that the dialogue must respect Cuba’s sovereignty, 
independence, and political system. And finally, that the Cuban government is 
unwilling to negotiate the Cuban Constitution (recently revised in 2019) or 
Cuba’s commitment to socialism. If the United States insists on a discussion on 
any of these three issues, there will be no dialogue. The Cuban Revolution’s 
defiance on these issues is rooted in its history – since the Revolution itself 
was an act of defiance against the US claim on its control over the Western 
Hemisphere through the 1823 Monroe Doctrine (now renewed by Trump in 2025 with 
his Corollary). This defiance has been contagious, building a Latin American 
resistance to US imperialism from the 1960s to the present (including at the 
heart of the Bolivarian process in Venezuela).

The Angry Tide

Latin America is going through a rapid and dangerous transformation. Country 
after country (from Argentina to El Salvador) have elected to power political 
formations from the Far Right of a Special Type. These are leaders who have 
committed themselves to strong conservative social values (rooted in the growth 
of reactionary Evangelical Christianity across the Americas), to a ruthless 
attack on the poor through a war on crime (shaped by a theory that calls for 
the arrest of any potential criminals and their incarceration, a policy 
pioneered by El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele), and by a sharp turn toward Western 
Civilization that includes an orientation towards the United States and against 
China (this sentiment oscillates from a celebration of Western culture to a 
hatred of communism). The emergence of the Far Right of a Special Type appears 
as if it will be in charge for a generation if it can erase the left from power 
in Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Venezuela (in Brazil, this Right has 
already taken charge of the legislature).

The parallel attacks on Venezuela and Cuba are part of the United States’ 
contribution to this rise of the Angry Tide across the Americas. Trump and his 
cronies would like to install their kind of leaders (such as Javier Milei) 
across the Americas as part of the Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. It 
is this that revives the idea of sovereignty in the Americas. When the Puerto 
Rican artist Bad Bunny ended his performance at the US Super Bowl with a 
celebration of all the countries in the Americas, and when he named each of 
them, that gesture was itself part of the battle over the idea of sovereignty.

The Cuban Revolution holds out against US imperialism, but under great 
pressure. Solidarity with Cuba is for the Cuban people, for the Cuban 
Revolution, for the reality of sovereignty across the Americas, and for the 
idea of socialism in the world. This is now the frontline of the fight against 
imperialism.

Vijay Prashad 

  


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