U.S. sanctions Cuba state oil company, tightens policy

·

·

1–2 minutes

Summary

Washington sanctioned Cuba’s state oil company, barring U.S. business and warning of penalties for others.

Why this matters

The sanctions further tightened U.S. pressure on Cuba and could affect international business tied to the island’s energy sector. They also signaled a broader hardening of U.S. policy toward Havana under the Trump administration.

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.

  • DR Congo Soccer Team reaches U.S. after Ebola quarantine

    DRC qualified for its first World Cup since appearing as Zaire in 1974.

    Full story +

  • U.S. sanctions Cuba state oil company, tightens policy

    Under the sanctions, U.S. citizens are no longer permitted to do business with the company.

    Full story +

  • Kennedy Center board seeks stay on Trump name ruling

    During his second term, Trump replaced the center’s leadership and installed a new board of trustees, which later named him chairman.

    Full story +

  • Senate panel advances Department of War rename

    The department was known as the War Department from its creation in 1789 until 1947, when President Harry Truman recommended renaming it the Department of Defense.

    Full story +

  • RSF drone strikes kill 15 in central Sudan city

    Emergency Lawyers, a local aid monitoring group, said the death toll was likely to rise because drones were still flying over the city Thursday.

    Full story +

  • Nigeria lawmakers advance state police overhaul

    The proposal gained urgency as insecurity spread. In May, gunmen abducted dozens of students and teachers in separate attacks in Oyo and Borno states.

    Full story +

  • Israel denies entry to French reporter Alice Froussard

    An Israeli minister accused the reporter of supporting Hamas.

    Full story +

  • U.K. defense chief resigns over military spending

    Healey said the government’s Defense Investment Plan fell “well short of what is required at this dangerous time.”

    Full story +

  • Study links iPhone rollout to lower U.S. birth rate

    Birth rates have declined for decades in both wealthy and poorer countries.

    Full story +

  • Stocks rise as investors assess U.S. strikes on Iran

    The Bureau of Labor Statistics said Thursday that wholesale inflation in May was higher than expected, following the May consumer inflation report.

    Full story +