U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced sanctions Thursday on Cuba’s state-owned energy company, Unión Cuba-Petróleo, escalating pressure on Havana and adding to strains in U.S.-Cuba relations.
“Cuba’s Communist elites have weaponized energy as a tool of social control and kleptocratic profit,” Rubio said in a post on X.
He added: “For decades, the regime has stolen and hoarded available fuel – using it for the Castros’ private jet, the security services forces used to repress the Cuban people, to keep empty tourist hotels lit up, and to bus people in for fake protests and political stunts – all while the Cuban people have suffered blackouts and waited weeks to fill their cars.”
Rubio also said that until Cuban people have “greater economic and political freedom and opportunity … we will continue to target the Communist regime’s ability to leverage its energy trade to further its corrupt agenda and violently repress the Cuban people.”
Under the sanctions, U.S. citizens are no longer permitted to do business with the company. According to the announcement, people outside the United States also could face sanctions if they conduct business with Unión Cuba-Petróleo.
The measures are part of the Trump administration’s tougher Cuba policy. Earlier this year, President Donald Trump announced broad sanctions against supporters of the Cuban government in an executive order.