Senate Democrats fail to limit Trump's Cuba military authority as Republican majority dismisses resolution
War powers resolution rejected 51-47; Kaine cited humanitarian crisis from US blockade causing medical disruptions, water shortages
نظرة سريعة
- Senate Democrats failed to pass a war powers resolution limiting Trump's authority to use military force against Cuba without congressional approval, with Republicans dismissing it 51-47 as out of order since there are no active hostilities.
- Senator Tim Kaine introduced the measure in March citing humanitarian crises caused by Trump's oil blockade, including medical care disruptions, water shortages and rising food prices.
- Trump imposed the blockade in February and has hinted at regime-change operations, calling Cuba 'next' after the US-Israeli war on Iran.
ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي
لماذا يهم
The US has maintained a decades-old embargo against Cuba. Trump imposed a new oil blockade in February 2026, threatening sanctions against countries and companies shipping crude to the island. Cuba has faced severe fuel shortages and nationwide blackouts following Venezuela's decision to halt oil shipments under US pressure.
A Democratic-led effort to limit US President Donald Trump's authority to use military force against Cuba without congressional authorization has failed in the Senate. The Republican-majority Senate's vote on the measure on Tuesday narrowly dismissed it as out of order in a 51-47 tally on grounds that there are no active hostilities with Cuba. Senator Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat who introduced the war powers resolution in March, said it was needed as Trump's blockade of the island had caused "humanitarian crises across Cuba," including disruptions to medical care, shortages of clean water and rising food prices. Trump imposed an oil blockade on Cuba in February, tightening the decades-old US embargo by threatening sanctions against countries and companies that ship crude to the island. He has repeatedly hinted at possible regime-change operations against the socialist government in Havana, pledging "a new dawn for Cuba" and warning that it is "next" after he is "finished with this," in reference to the ongoing US-Israeli war on Iran. Trump said his policy of "peace through strength" – including the raid to abduct Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his wife in January – had been "very, very successful." Cuba has faced nationwide blackouts and severe fuel shortages in recent months, after Venezuela – once its main oil supplier – halted shipments under US pressure. Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez condemned Washington's "ferocious blockade" of fuel supplies, calling it a "brutal onslaught" on the country's economic system. The situation briefly eased in late March, when a Russian tanker delivered 100,000 tons of crude after reportedly bypassing the US blockade. Trump later said that Washington doesn't "mind having somebody get a boat load" into the island, as "they need to survive." Moscow has said it will maintain support for Cuba amid the tightening blockade.
أسئلة مفتوحة
- Will Trump pursue military action against Cuba?
- How will Russia further support Cuba?
- Will Congress pursue additional oversight measures?





