The Trump team ratchets up its punishment of Cuba

This week following what it explained was a comprehensive review of U S framework toward Cuba the Trump administration communicated new measures aimed at strengthening its campaign of maximum pressure on the Cuban regime with the clear intent of further weakening the already damaged Cuban business activity The latest measures are aimed at further reducing U S citizen journey to the island claiming that this movement gives a boost to the Cuban economic system that must be curtailed by targeting two areas where notable voyage by U S citizens who do not have relatives on the island educational and religious groups By introducing new restrictions on such voyage the administration seeks to dramatically reduce the number of non-Cuban American trips These new measures build on the actions taken in the first days of Trump The return of Donald Trump to the White House meant that two hardline Cuban Americans who had shaped Cuba program in the first term were now back in charge Mauricio Claver-Carone returned to his role in the National Prevention Council as Latin American advisor and Marco Rubio was elevated to Secretary of State They have wasted little time in making clear that their Cuba approach is going to be one of maximum pressure On his first day in office Trump restored Cuba to the State Sponsor of Terrorism list citing supposed links to Hamas and Hezbollah and made clear that Title III of Helms-Burton would not be suspended under his administration Gary Prevost A second key action was to take aim at a key aspect of the Cuban economic system that the Biden administration had not targeted remittances Orbit SA a Cuban company that processed hundreds of millions of dollars per year in transfers from Cuban Americans to the island was declared an entity of the Cuban administration and U S companies including Western Union were prohibited from doing business with them This leaves the primary highway for remittances from the United States to reach Cuba to be the daily airline flights from the United States with couriers who take money to the island Hardline Cuban American legislators have called for the ending of such flights and that could happen in coming months Eventually an critical protocol initiative is aimed at Cuba s health brigades abroad which are both humanitarian projects and an vital money earner for the Cuban financial sector The Trump administration is threatening to withhold the opportunity to excursion to the United States for leaders of any country that hosts the clinical missions In the short term it is not likely to cancel any major existing agreements with countries like Brazil and Mexico but it may discourage new agreements Framing all of this hostility toward Cuba is the the bulk up-to-date national safeguard assessment from the U S Southern Command that for the first time in decades declares Cuba to be a prospective precaution pitfall to the United States because of its close ties to both China and Russia Such a declaration could provide justification for even more drastic actions from this administration toward Cuba August H Nimtz Just as the Trump administration is shredding the social safety net for toilers at home and abroad the Cuban executive against all odds does just the opposite a bad example in the opinion of Washington and Wall Street Their six-decade-long bipartisan-enforced embargo intends to make life as laborious as achievable for Cuban toilers with the hope that they ll one day overthrow their revolution still a mirage U S rulers have never forgiven as Fidel Castro so perceptibly pointed out in Cuba s toilers for making a socialist revolution right under Washington s nose and continuing to defend it For that sin their punishment demands to ratchet up Gary Prevost is a professor emeritus of political science at the College of St Benedict and St John s University August Nimtz is a professor of political science at the University of Minnesota Both are members of the Minnesota Cuba Committee The post The Trump squad ratchets up its punishment of Cuba appeared first on MinnPost