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Updated February 13, 2020


Cuba: U.S. Policy Overview

Since the early 1960s, when the United States imposed a
trade embargo on Cuba, the centerpiece of U.S. policy
toward Cuba has consisted of economic sanctions aimed at
isolating the government.
In 2014, the Obama Administration initiated a major policy
shift moving away from sanctions toward engagement and
the normalization of relations. The policy change included
the rescission of Cuba's designation as a state sponsor of
international terrorism (May 2015); the restoration of
diplomatic relations (July 2015); and efforts to increase
travel, commerce, and the flow of information to Cuba by
easing restrictions on travel, remittances, trade,
telecommunications, and banking and financial services
(2015 and 2016, accomplished through amendments to the
Cuban Assets Control Regulations, administered by the
Treasury Department, and the Export Administration
Regulations, administered by the Commerce Department).
The restoration of relations led to increased government-to-
government engagement, with over 20 bilateral agreements
negotiated and numerous bilateral dialogues.
President Trump unveiled a new policy toward Cuba in
2017, introducing new sanctions and rolling back some of
the Obama Administration's efforts to normalize relations.
By 2019, the Trump Administration had largely abandoned
engagement by increasing economic sanctions significantly
to pressure the Cuban government on its human rights
record and its support for the regime of Nicol6s Maduro in
Venezuela. It took actions to allow lawsuits against those
trafficking in property confiscated by the Cuban
government and tightened restrictions on travel to Cuba,
including terminating cruise ship travel from the United
States and U.S. flights to Cuban cities other than Havana.
Cuban Political Developments. In April 2018, Miguel
Dfaz-Canel, who was serving as first vice president,
succeeded Rafil Castro as president, but Castro continues to
head the Cuban Communist Party until 2021. The selection
of Dfaz-Canel, now 59 years old, reflects the generational
change in Cuban leadership that began several years ago
and marks the first time since the 1959 Cuban revolution
that a Castro is not in charge of the government. While in
power from 2006 to 2018, Rail Castro began to implement
significant economic policy changes, moving toward a
more mixed economy with a stronger private sector, but his
government's slow, gradualist approach did not produce
major improvements to the economy, which has
experienced minimal growth in recent years.
In February 2019, almost 87% of Cubans approved a new
constitution in a national referendum. The changes include
the addition of an appointed prime minister to oversee
government operations; limits on the president's tenure
(two five-year terms) and age (60, beginning first term);
and market-oriented economic reforms, including the right
to private property and the promotion of foreign


investment. However, the new constitution ensures the state
sector's dominance over the economy and the predominant
role of the Communist Party. In October 2019, Cuba's
National Assembly appointed Dfaz-Canel as president
under the new constitution. In December 2019, Dfaz-Canel
appointed tourism minister Manuel Marrero Cruz as prime
minister, who reportedly will serve as the president's
administrative right-hand man in implementing policy.
The Cuban economy has been hard-hit by the reimposition
of, and increase in, U.S. sanctions that impede international
financial transactions with Cuba and by Venezuela's
economic crisis, which has limited Venezuela's support to
Cuba. Cuban officials reported that 4.3 million tourists
visited Cuba in 2019, down from 4.7 million in 2018; the
decline in tourism has hurt private sector businesses. The
Economist Intelligence Unit estimates the Cuban economy
grew 0.5% in 2019 but will contract 0.7% in 2020.
Trump Administration Sanctions. President Trump
issued a national security presidential memorandum in June
2017 that introduced new sanctions. These included the
elimination of people-to-people travel for individuals and
restrictions on transactions with companies controlled by
the Cuban military. The State Department issued a list of
restricted entities in 2017, which has been updated
several times, most recently in November 2019. The list
includes 223 entities and subentities, including 2 ministries,
5 holding companies and 49 of their subentities, 109 hotels,
2 tourist agencies, 5 marinas, 10 stores in Old Havana, and
41 entities serving defense and security sectors.
The Administration's strong criticism of Cuba for its
support of Venezuela began in November 2018, when then-
National Security Adviser John Bolton asserted that Cuba
was responsible for enabling the Venezuelan regime's
repression. In rhetoric reminiscent of the Cold War, Bolton
referred to Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua as the Troika
of Tyranny in the hemisphere. In 2019, the Trump
Administration has imposed a series of sanctions against
Cuba for its poor human rights record and its support for
the Maduro government in Venezuela. These include
* Efforts to Stop Venezuelan Oil Exports to Cuba.
   Since April 2019, the Treasury Department has imposed
   sanctions on several shipping companies and vessels
   that have transported Venezuelan oil to Cuba, including
   six vessels sanctioned in early December 2019. In July
   2019, it imposed sanctions on Cuba's state-run oil
   import and export company. Cuba and Venezuela signed
   a preferential oil agreement in 2000 whereby Cuba
   received some 90,000-100,000 barrels of oil per day
   (bpd), but Venezuela's economic crisis reduced this to
   between 40,000-50,000 bpd (about one-third of Cuba's
   consumption) in early 2019.
* Lawsuits Related to Confiscated Property. Effective
   May 2, 2019, the Administration allowed the right to file

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