Trump expands US sanctions on Cuban government and affiliates


FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump, next to U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., makes an announcement linking autism to childhood vaccines and to the use of popular pain medication Tylenol for pregnant women and children, claims which are not backed by decades of science, at the White House, in Washington, D.C., U.S., September 22, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo

WASHINGTON, May 1 (Reuters) - ⁠U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Friday broadening U.S. sanctions against the Cuban government, two ⁠White House officials told Reuters, as he seeks to put more pressure on Havana after ousting Venezuela's leader.

The ‌fresh sanctions target people, entities and affiliates that support the Cuban government's security apparatus or are complicit in corruption or serious human rights violations, as well as agents, officials or supporters of the government, the officials said.

It was not immediately clear who exactly had been hit with sanctions under the order, which was ​first reported by Reuters.

But a copy of the order released by the White ⁠House said the sanctions could apply to "any foreign ⁠person" operating in the "energy, defense and related materiel, metals and mining, financial services, or security sector of the Cuban economy, or ⁠any ‌other sector of the Cuban economy."

The order authorizes secondary sanctions for conducting or facilitating transactions with those targeted under the order, the officials said.

The Cuban government did not immediately respond to the development, which took place as Cuba held its ⁠traditional May Day celebrations.

RATCHETING UP PRESSURE ON CUBAN GOVERNMENT

Jeremy Paner, a former sanctions ​investigator at the U.S. Treasury's Office of ‌Foreign Assets Control, said the move was the most significant one for non-American companies since the U.S. embargo against ⁠Cuba began decades ago.

"Oil ​and gas, mining companies, and banks that have carefully segregated their Cuba operations from the United States are no longer protected," said Paner, who is now a partner at Hughes Hubbard & Reed, a law firm.

The new sanctions are the latest broadside by the Trump administration against Cuba, which ⁠the president has repeatedly declared is near a state of collapse.

Under Trump, ​U.S. forces have launched strikes on boats allegedly carrying drugs off Venezuela and gone into Caracas to seize President Nicolas Maduro. Trump has said, without providing specifics, that "Cuba is next."

The officials said Trump's order contained an implicit warning to Cuba, accusing the Havana government of ⁠aligning itself with Iran and militant groups like Hezbollah.

"Cuba provides a permissive environment for hostile foreign intelligence, military, and terrorist operations less than 100 miles from the American homeland," one official said.

The U.S. has long demanded Cuba open its state-run economy, pay reparations for properties expropriated by the government of former leader Fidel Castro and hold "free and fair" elections. Cuba has said its form of socialist ​government is not up for negotiation.

The U.S. heaped additional sanctions and pressure on the island ⁠early this year, when it halted Venezuelan oil exports to Cuba after ousting Maduro on January 3. Trump later threatened to slap punishing ​tariffs on any other country that sent crude to Cuba, prompting Mexico, another ‌top supplier, to stop shipments to the island.

The fuel shortage in ​Cuba has contributed to major national-level blackouts and prompted many foreign airlines to suspend flights to the island.

(Reporting by Steve Holland and Daphne Psaledakis; Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Michelle Nichols, Trevor Hunnicutt and Rosalba O'Brien)

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