Cuba’s Alliances with Russia, China, and Others Shape U.S. Policy
How the U.S. Tariff Order Reshapes Its 2026 Policy Toward Cuba
America’s relationship with Cuba in 2026 is defined by deep strategic distrust, sharpened U.S. national-security concerns, and an explicit shift toward economic coercion. The United States frames its policy on the premise that the Cuban government’s external alliances and internal repression constitute a direct threat to U.S. national security and foreign policy. Washington argues that Havana’s alignment with hostile governments and non-state actors extends beyond ideological sympathy and into active cooperation that undermines regional stability. In this view, Cuba’s intelligence partnerships with the Russian Federation and the People’s Republic of China occupy the center of U.S. concern. The United States asserts that Russia operates its largest overseas signals-intelligence site from the island, enabling efforts to intercept sensitive U.S. communications, while China is said to be expanding military and intelligence ties that place advanced surveillance capabilities close to American shores. These relationships are portrayed not as passive diplomatic alignments but as deliberate steps by Havana to facilitate adversarial intrusion into the Western Hemisphere.
Washington’s criticism also extends to Cuba’s alleged engagement with non-state militant groups. U.S. officials claim that the island provides a permissive environment for organizations such as Hamas and Hezbollah, enabling them to build networks with economic and political implications across the region. This alleged facilitation is treated in U.S. policy as an unacceptable penetration of extremist influence into the hemisphere, broadening the perceived threat beyond traditional state-to-state rivalry. The policy narrative posits that Cuba actively works to circumvent U.S. and international sanctions that target hostile actors, helping partners such as the Islamic Republic of Iran maintain influence in the region. Within this broader pattern, Washington casts the Cuban state not simply as aligned with adversaries but as operationally assisting them in ways that directly undermine U.S. objectives.
In parallel with these external-security critiques, the United States continues to highlight human-rights and governance issues as central to its approach. American policy statements describe the Cuban system as repressive, accusing authorities of punishing dissent, restricting free expression, controlling religious activity, suppressing independent civil society, and persecuting families of political prisoners. The Cuban government is depicted as governing through coercion while exporting ideological influence across Latin America. These internal behaviors are framed as inseparable from external security concerns, because they illustrate a model of governance fundamentally at odds with U.S. goals for democratic development in the hemisphere. Washington’s position blends moral, political, and strategic reasoning, asserting that a regime willing to repress its citizens is equally willing to collaborate with foreign powers in destabilizing ways.
By early 2026, this mixture of security and human-rights claims culminated in a formal declaration of national emergency by Donald J. Trump, invoking authorities under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act and the National Emergencies Act. The declaration concluded that Cuba’s actions represent an unusual and extraordinary threat sourced largely outside the United States, justifying the activation of broad presidential powers. Central to the 2026 policy shift was a novel tariff mechanism designed to widen pressure beyond Havana itself. Instead of merely sanctioning Cuban entities, Washington signaled its intent to impose additional duties on goods from any foreign country that directly or indirectly supplies oil to Cuba. By targeting third-party providers, the United States sought to constrict Cuba’s access to energy—one of the island’s most essential imports—and thereby increase the overall cost of supporting the Cuban state.
This tariff system rests on a multilayered administrative process. The Department of Commerce is tasked with determining whether a country has supplied oil to Cuba, including through indirect channels such as intermediaries or third-country transfers. Once such a determination is made, the Department of State evaluates whether tariffs should be imposed and at what level, in consultation with the Departments of Treasury, Commerce, Homeland Security, and the U.S. Trade Representative. The President then reviews recommendations and decides whether to activate the additional duties. The structure is intentionally flexible, allowing the administration to adjust tariffs based on evolving political behavior, new intelligence, or foreign retaliation.
The policy explicitly anticipates potential countermeasures by other states. Should any government respond with economic or political retaliation, the President reserves authority to modify the order to preserve its effectiveness. Conversely, if Cuba or an affected foreign country takes concrete steps to distance itself from the activities Washington identifies as threatening—whether by reducing military cooperation with Russia or China, limiting engagement with militant groups, or addressing human-rights concerns—the order may be amended. This conditional design reflects a strategy that seeks leverage rather than permanent escalation.
The monitoring provisions reinforce this dynamic. The Secretary of State must continually assess developments tied to the national emergency and recommend further actions if existing measures prove insufficient. The Secretary of Commerce must track all oil flows that may reach Cuba, enabling rapid recalibration of tariffs as global trade patterns shift. These mechanisms create a policy environment in which Cuba’s access to energy becomes an ongoing point of pressure, and foreign governments face a standing incentive to reconsider commercial ties with Havana.
By 2026, then, the U.S. relationship with Cuba is characterized by hardened suspicion and an expansive interpretation of national security. Washington portrays Cuba not merely as an ideological adversary but as an active enabler of geopolitical rivals and extremist networks. This framing justifies an assertive economic strategy aimed not only at the island itself but at any state that helps sustain it. At the same time, the United States continues to emphasize support for the Cuban people, insisting that its actions target the government rather than ordinary citizens. The resulting policy is narrower than full economic isolation yet broader than bilateral sanctions, creating an internationalized pressure system rooted in a belief that strategic alignment with Washington is inseparable from regional stability.
1st March 2026