Trump Signs Executive Order Expanding US Sanctions on Cuba
Order authorizes penalties on foreign companies and financial institutions doing business with the island, extending US enforcement power globally
Hızlı Bakış
- US President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Friday expanding sanctions on Cuba to target foreign companies and financial institutions doing business with the island.
- The measure extends US enforcement power beyond its borders using a 'secondary sanctions' model, allowing authorities to block assets of foreign individuals or entities operating in key sectors including energy, financial services, mining, and defense.
- The provisions could affect companies in China and Europe and echo sanctions approaches used against Iran.
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US-Cuba relations have historically been contentious, with previous administrations easing restrictions during diplomatic normalization efforts. This executive order represents a significant reversal, expanding the scope of economic pressure beyond Cuban officials to include foreign third-party actors.
US President Donald Trump on Friday signed an executive order expanding sanctions on Cuba, authorising penalties not only against Cuban officials but also on foreign companies and financial institutions that do business with the island. The order significantly broadens Washington’s ability to exert economic pressure, allowing US authorities to target third-country actors deemed to support the Cuban government, in a move that could have implications for global firms, including those in China and Europe. Under the measure, the United States can block the assets of any foreign individual or entity operating in key sectors of the Cuban economy – including energy, financial services, mining and defence – or providing material, financial or technological support to the government. It also authorises sanctions on foreign financial institutions that facilitate significant transactions for designated entities, including restricting their access to the US banking system or freezing assets under US jurisdiction. The provisions effectively extend US enforcement power beyond its borders, echoing the “secondary sanctions” model Washington has used in other contexts, such as Iran, and increasing the risks for international companies with exposure to Cuba.
Açık Sorular
- How will foreign companies and financial institutions respond to the new sanctions?
- Will China or European countries push back against the extraterritorial enforcement?
- What specific transactions will trigger sanctions on foreign financial institutions?



