Cuba: U.S. Policy in the 115th Congress
Updated October 29, 2018
Congressional Research Service
https://crsreports.congress.gov
R44822
Cuba: U.S. Policy in the 115th Congress
Summary
Cuba remains a one-party authoritarian state with a poor human rights record. Current President
Miguel Díaz-Canel succeeded Raúl Castro on April 19, 2018, although Castro is continuing in his
position as first secretary of Cuba’s Communist Party. Over the past decade, Cuba has
implemented gradual market-oriented economic policy changes, but critics maintain that it has
not taken enough action to foster sustainable economic growth. Most observers do not anticipate
significant policy changes under Díaz-Canel, at least in the short term, but the president faces the
enormous challenges of reforming the economy and responding to desires for greater freedom.
U.S. Policy
Congress has played an active role in shaping policy toward Cuba, including the enactment of
legislation strengthening and at times easing U.S. economic sanctions. Since the early 1960s, the
centerpiece of U.S. policy has consisted of economic sanctions aimed at isolating the Cuban
government. In 2014, however, the Obama Administration initiated a major policy shift, moving
away from sanctions toward a policy of engagement. The policy change included the restoration
of diplomatic relations (July 2015); the rescission of Cuba’s designation as a state sponsor of
international terrorism (May 2015); and an increase in travel, commerce, and the flow of
information to Cuba implemented through regulatory changes.
President Trump unveiled a new policy toward Cuba in June 2017 that partially rolls back some
of the Obama Administration’s efforts to normalize relations. The most significant regulatory
changes include restrictions on transactions with companies controlled by the Cuban military and
the elimination of individual people-to-people travel. In response to unexplained injuries of
members of the U.S. diplomatic community at the U.S. Embassy in Havana, the State Department
reduced the staff of the U.S. Embassy and in September 2017 and subsequently ordered the
departure of 15 Cuban diplomats from the Cuban Embassy in Washington, DC in October 2017.
Legislative Activity
In the 115th Congress, debate over Cuba policy is continuing, especially with regard to economic
sanctions. Several bills have been introduced to ease or lift sanctions altogether: H.R. 351 and S.
1287 (travel); H.R. 442/S. 472 and S. 1286 (some economic sanctions); H.R. 498
(telecommunications); H.R. 525 (agricultural exports and investment); H.R. 572 (agricultural and
medical exports and travel); H.R. 574, H.R. 2966, and S. 1699 (overall embargo); and S. 275
(private financing for U.S. agricultural exports). Two pending FY2019 House appropriations bills,
Commerce (H.R. 5952) and Financial Services (H.R. 6258 and H.R. 6147), have provisions that
would tighten economic sanctions.
Congress has continued to provide funding for democracy and human rights assistance in Cuba
and for U.S.-government sponsored broadcasting. For FY2017, Congress provided $20 million in
democracy assistance and $28.1 million for Cuba broadcasting (P.L. 115-31). For FY2018, it
provided $20 million for democracy assistance and $28.9 million for Cuba broadcasting (P.L.
115-141; explanatory statement to H.R. 1625). For FY2019, the Trump Administration requested
$10 million in democracy assistance and $13.7 million for Cuba broadcasting. The House
Appropriations Committee’s State Department and Foreign Operations appropriations bill, H.R.
6385, would provide $30 million for democracy programs, whereas the Senate version, S. 3108,
would provide $15 million; both bills would provide $29 million for broadcasting.
In other action, several approved measures—P.L. 115-232, P.L. 115-244, and P.L. 115-245—have
provisions extending a prohibition on the use of funds in FY2019 to close or relinquish control of
the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; the conference report to P.L. 115-232 also
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requires a report on security cooperation between Russia and Cuba. The FAA Reauthorization Act
of 2018, P.L. 115-254, requires the Transportation Security Administration to brief Congress on
certain aspects of Cuban airport security and to develop and implement a mechanism to better
track public air charter flights between the United States and Cuba. The Senate version of the
2018 farm bill, H.R. 2, approved in June 2018, would permit funding for certain U.S. agricultural
export promotion programs in Cuba. In April 2018, the Senate approved S.Res. 224,
commemorating the legacy of Cuban democracy activist Oswaldo Payá. For more on legislative
action and initiatives in the 115th Congress, see Appendix A.
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Contents
Recent Developments ...................................................................................................................... 1
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 2
Cuba’s Political and Economic Environment .................................................................................. 5
Brief Historical Background ..................................................................................................... 5
Political Conditions ................................................................................................................... 6
Cuba’s Political Transition to a New President .................................................................. 7
Human Rights............................................................................................................................ 9
Economic Conditions .............................................................................................................. 14
Cuba’s Foreign Relations ........................................................................................................ 19
U.S. Policy Toward Cuba .............................................................................................................. 26
Background on U.S.-Cuban Relations .................................................................................... 26
Obama Administration Policy ................................................................................................. 28
Shift Toward Normalizing Relations ................................................................................ 29
Trump Administration Policy .................................................................................................. 32
Partial Rollback of Engagement Policy ............................................................................ 32
Continued Focus on Human Rights .................................................................................. 34
Continued Engagement in Some Areas ............................................................................. 36
U.S. Response to Injuries of U.S. Personnel in Havana ................................................... 37
Debate on the Direction of U.S. Policy ................................................................................... 43
Selected Issues in U.S.-Cuban Relations ....................................................................................... 44
U.S. Travel to Cuba ................................................................................................................. 45
U.S. Exports and Sanctions ..................................................................................................... 49
Trademark Sanction ................................................................................................................ 53
Democracy and Human Rights Funding ................................................................................. 55
Radio and TV Martí ................................................................................................................ 59
Migration Issues ...................................................................................................................... 60
Antidrug Cooperation .............................................................................................................. 63
U.S. Property Claims ............................................................................................................... 65
U.S. Fugitives from Justice ..................................................................................................... 67
Outlook .......................................................................................................................................... 68
Figures
Figure 1. Provincial Map of Cuba ................................................................................................... 4
Figure 2. Cuba: Real Gross Domestic Product Growth (%), 2005-2017 ...................................... 16
Figure 3. U.S. Exports to Cuba, 2002-2017 .................................................................................. 50
Figure 4. Maritime Interdictions of Cubans by the U.S. Coast Guard .......................................... 62
Tables
Table 1. Undocumented Cuban Migrants, FY2010-FY2018 ......................................................... 63
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Appendixes
Appendix A. Legislative Initiatives in the 115th Congress ............................................................ 70
Appendix B. Links to U.S. Government Reports .......................................................................... 82
Contacts
Author Information ....................................................................................................................... 83
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Recent Developments
In early November 2018, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel is scheduled to visit Russia, China,
North Korea, Vietnam, and Laos. (See “Cuba’s Foreign Relations,” below.)
On October 16, 2018, the State Department’s U.S. Mission to the United Nations launched a
campaign to call attention to Cuba’s estimated 130 political prisoners. (See “Human Rights,”
below.)
On October 15, 2018, the Cuban government released Cuban political opposition activist Tomás
Núñez Magdariaga from prison after a 62-day hunger strike. The State Department had called for
his release, maintaining that he was imprisoned on false charges and convicted in a sham trial.
(See “Human Rights,” below.)
On October 6, 2018, President Trump signed into law the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 (P.L.
115-254) with a provision requiring the Transportation Security Administration to brief Congress
on certain aspects of Cuban airport security, develop and implement a mechanism to better track
public air charter flights between the United States and Cuba, and direct public air charters to
provide updated data on such flights.
On October 3, 2018, the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation
reported that in the first nine months of 2018, through September, there were least 2,248 short-
term detentions for political reasons. This figure was almost a 43% decline compared to the same
time period in 2017. (See “Human Rights,” below.)
On September 28, 2018, President Trump signed into law an FY2019 appropriations measure,
P.L. 115-245, covering the Department of Defense (as well as Labor, Health and Human Services,
and Education), with a provision continuing a prohibition against funds from being used to carry
out the closure or realignment of the U.S. Naval Station, Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
On September 26, 2018, the Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center of Buffalo, New York,
announced it was entering into a joint venture with Cuba’s Center for Molecular Immunology
focused on the development of cancer therapies. (See discussion on foreign investment in
“Economic Conditions,” below.)
On September 21, 2018, President Trump signed into law a FY2019 appropriations measure, P.L.
115-244, covering Military Construction and Veterans Affairs (as well as Energy and Water,
Legislative Branch, and Military Construction and Veterans Affairs), with a provision continuing
a provision prohibiting funding to carry out the closure or realignment of the U.S. Naval Station
at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
On September 13, 2018, a delegation of Cuban scientists met with U.S. scientists and State
Department officials on the health ailments affecting 26 members of the U.S. diplomatic
community in Havana. The Cuban scientists maintain there could be a variety of reasons why the
diplomats became sick and that they have not seen any credible evidence that some type of high-
tech weapon was used. (See “U.S. Response to Injuries of U.S. Personnel in Havana,” below.)
On September 6, 2018, the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on the Western
Hemisphere, held a hearing on U.S. policy toward Cuba featuring State Department witnesses
that focused on U.S. policy under the Trump Administration and issues related to the mysterious
health incidents of members of the U.S. diplomatic community in Havana. (See
https://foreignaffairs.house.gov/hearing/subcommittee-hearing-u-s-policy-toward-cuba/.)
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On August 30, 2018, the State Department submitted a report to Congress on its Accountability
Review Board (ARB) examination of the State Department’s response to unexplained health
injuries in Cuba. The ARB found that the department’s security systems and procedures were
overall adequate and properly implemented but that there were significant vacancies in security
staffing and some challenges with information sharing and communication. (See “U.S. Response
to Injuries of U.S. Personnel in Havana,” below.)
On August 23, 2018, the State Department eased its travel advisory for Cuba from Level 3,
reconsider travel, to Level 2, exercise increased caution. (See “Cuba Travel Advisory,” below.)
On August 13, 2018, President Trump signed into law the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for FY2019, P.L. 115-232, with a provision extending a prohibition on the use
of funds in FY2019 to close or relinquish control of the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba. The conference report (H.Rept. 115-874) also requires a report on security cooperation
between Russia and Cuba. (See discussion on Russia in section on “Cuba’s Foreign Relations.”)
Introduction
Political and economic developments in Cuba and U.S. policy toward the island nation, located
just 90 miles from the United States, have been significant congressional concerns for many
years. Especially since the end of the Cold War, Congress has played an active role in shaping
U.S. policy toward Cuba, first with the enactment of the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 (CDA;
P.L. 102-484, Title XVII) and then with the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity
(LIBERTAD) Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-114). Both measures strengthened U.S. economic sanctions
on Cuba that had first been imposed in the early 1960s but also provided road maps for a
normalization of relations, dependent upon significant political and economic changes in Cuba.
Congress partially modified its sanctions-based policy toward Cuba when it enacted the Trade
Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act of 2000 (TSRA; P.L. 106-387, Title IX) allowing
for U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba.
Over the past decade, much of the debate in
Cuba at a Glance
Congress over U.S. policy has focused on
U.S. sanctions. In 2009, Congress took
Population: 11.2 million (2016, ONEI)
legislative action in an appropriations
Area: 42,426 square miles (ONEI), slightly smaller than
Pennsylvania
measure (P.L. 111-8) to ease restrictions on
GDP: $96.9 billion (2017, nominal U.S. $, EIU est.)
family travel and travel for the marketing of
agricultural exports, marking the first
Real GDP Growth: 0.5% (2016); 0.9% (2017, EIU est.)
congressional action easing Cuba sanctions in
Key Trading Partners: Exports (2017): Canada,
19.4%; Venezuela, 15.6%; China, 15.2%; Spain 8.6%.
almost a decade. The Obama Administration
Imports (2017): Venezuela, 18.1%; China, 16.3%; Spain,
took further action in 2009 by lifting all
10.8%. (ONEI)
restrictions on family travel and on cash
Life Expectancy: 79.6 years (2015, UNDP)
remittances by family members to their
Literacy (adult): 99.7% (2015, UNDP)
relatives in Cuba. In 2011, the Obama
Legislature: National Assembly of People’s Power,
Administration announced the further easing
currently 605 members (five-year terms elected in
of restrictions on educational and religious
March 2018).
travel to Cuba and on donative remittances to
Sources: National Office of Statistics and Information
other than family members.
(ONEI), Republic of Cuba; U.N. Development
Programme (UNDP); Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU).
In December 2014, just after the adjournment
of the 113th Congress, President Obama
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announced a major shift in U.S. policy toward Cuba, moving away from a sanctions-based policy
aimed at isolating Cuba toward a policy of engagement and a normalization of relations. The
policy shift led to the restoration of diplomatic relations, the rescission of Cuba’s designation as a
state sponsor of international terrorism, and the easing of some restrictions on travel and
commerce with Cuba. There was mixed reaction in Congress, with some Members of Congress
supporting the change and others opposing it. Legislative initiatives in the 114th Congress
reflected this policy divide, with some bills introduced that would have further eased U.S.
economic sanctions and others that would have blocked the policy shift and introduced new
sanctions.
This report examines U.S. policy toward Cuba in the 115th Congress. It is divided into three major
sections analyzing Cuba’s political and economic environment; U.S. policy toward Cuba; and
selected issues in U.S.-Cuban relations, including restrictions on travel and trade, funding for
democracy and human rights projects in Cuba and for U.S. government-sponsored radio and
television broadcasting, migration, antidrug cooperation, U.S. property claims, and U.S. fugitives
from justice in Cuba. Legislative initiatives in the 115th Congress are noted throughout the report,
and Appendix A lists enacted measures and other bills and resolutions. Appendix B provides
links to U.S. government information and reports on Cuba. For more on Cuba from CRS, see
CRS In Focus IF10045, Cuba: U.S. Policy Overview, by Mark P. Sullivan;
CRS Insight IN10885, Cuba After the Castros, by Mark P. Sullivan;
CRS Report R43888, Cuba Sanctions: Legislative Restrictions Limiting the
Normalization of Relations, by Dianne E. Rennack and Mark P. Sullivan;
CRS Report RL31139, Cuba: U.S. Restrictions on Travel and Remittances, by
Mark P. Sullivan;
CRS Insight IN10798, U.S. Response to Injuries of U.S. Embassy Personnel in
Havana, Cuba, by Mark P. Sullivan and Cory R. Gill;
CRS Insight IN10788, Hurricanes Irma and Maria: Impact on Caribbean
Countries and Foreign Territories, by Mark P. Sullivan;
CRS Insight IN10722, Cuba: President Trump Partially Rolls Back Obama
Engagement Policy, by Mark P. Sullivan;
CRS Report R44119, U.S. Agricultural Trade with Cuba: Current Limitations
and Future Prospects, by Mark A. McMinimy;
CRS Report R44137, Naval Station Guantanamo Bay: History and Legal Issues
Regarding Its Lease Agreements, by Jennifer K. Elsea and Daniel H. Else; and
CRS Report R44714, U.S. Policy on Cuban Migrants: In Brief, by Andorra
Bruno.
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Figure 1. Provincial Map of Cuba
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS).
CRS-4
Cuba: U.S. Policy in the 115th Congress
Cuba’s Political and Economic Environment
Brief Historical Background1
Cuba became an independent nation in 1902. From its discovery by Columbus in 1492 until the
Spanish-American War in 1898, Cuba was a Spanish colony. In the 19th century, the country
became a major sugar producer, with slaves from Africa arriving in increasing numbers to work
the sugar plantations. The drive for independence from Spain grew stronger in the second half of
the 19th century, but independence came about only after the United States entered the conflict,
when the USS Maine sank in Havana Harbor after an explosion of undetermined origin. In the
aftermath of the Spanish-American War, the United States ruled Cuba for four years until Cuba
was granted its independence in 1902. Nevertheless, the United States retained the right to
intervene in Cuba to preserve Cuban independence and maintain stability in accordance with the
Platt Amendment,2 which became part of the Cuban Constitution of 1901. The United States
subsequently intervened militarily three times between 1906 and 1921 to restore order, but in
1934, the Platt Amendment was repealed.
Cuba’s political system as an independent nation often was dominated by authoritarian figures.
Gerardo Machado (1925-1933), who served two terms as president, became increasingly
dictatorial until he was ousted by the military. A short-lived reformist government gave way to a
series of governments that were dominated behind the scenes by military leader Fulgencio Batista
until he was elected president in 1940. Batista was voted out of office in 1944 and was followed
by two successive presidents in a democratic era that ultimately became characterized by
corruption and increasing political violence. Batista seized power in a bloodless coup in 1952,
and his rule progressed into a brutal dictatorship that fueled popular unrest and set the stage for
Fidel Castro’s rise to power.
Castro led an unsuccessful attack on military barracks in Santiago, Cuba, on July 26, 1953. He
was jailed but subsequently freed. He went into exile in Mexico, where he formed the 26th of July
Movement. Castro returned to Cuba in 1956 with the goal of overthrowing the Batista
dictatorship. His revolutionary movement was based in the Sierra Maestra Mountains in eastern
Cuba, and it joined with other resistance groups seeking Batista’s ouster. Batista ultimately fled
the country on January 1, 1959, leading to 47 years of rule under Fidel Castro until he stepped
down from power provisionally in July 2006 because of poor health and ceded power to his
brother Raúl Castro.
Although Fidel Castro had promised a return to democratic constitutional rule when he first took
power, he instead moved to consolidate his rule, repress dissent, and imprison or execute
thousands of opponents. Under the new revolutionary government, Castro’s supporters gradually
displaced members of less radical groups. Castro moved toward close relations with the Soviet
Union, and relations with the United States deteriorated rapidly as the Cuban government
expropriated U.S. properties. In April 1961, Castro declared that the Cuban revolution was
1 Portions of this background section are drawn from U.S. Department of State, “Background Note: Cuba,” April 28,
2011. For further background, see Rex A. Hudson, ed., Cuba, A Country Study, Federal Research Division, Library of
Congress (Washington, DC: GPO, 2002), at https://www.loc.gov/item/2002018893/; “Country Profile: Cuba,” Federal
Research Division, Library of Congress, September 2006, at https://www.loc.gov/rr/frd/cs/profiles/Cuba.pdf; Leslie
Bethell, ed., Cuba, A Short History (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1993); and Hugh Thomas, Cuba:
The Pursuit of Freedom (New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1971).
2 U.S. Senator Orville Platt introduced an amendment to an army appropriations bill that was approved by both houses
and enacted into law in 1901.
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socialist, and in December 1961, he proclaimed himself to be a Marxist-Leninist. Over the next
30 years, Cuba was a close ally of the Soviet Union and depended on it for significant assistance
until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.
From 1959 until 1976, Castro ruled by decree. In 1976, however, the Cuban government enacted
a new Constitution setting forth the Cuban Communist Party (PCC) as the leading force in state
and society, with power centered in a Political Bureau headed by Fidel Castro. Cuba’s
Constitution also outlined national, provincial, and local governmental structures. Since then,
legislative authority has been vested in a National Assembly of People’s Power that meets twice
annually for brief periods, although the Assembly has permanent commissions that work
throughout the year. When the Assembly is not in session, a Council of State, elected by the
Assembly, acts on its behalf. According to Cuba’s Constitution, the president of the Council of
State is the country’s head of state and government. Executive power in Cuba is vested in a
Council of Ministers, also headed by the country’s head of state and government, that is, the
president of the Council of State.
Fidel Castro served as head of state and government through his position as president of the
Council of State from 1976 until February 2008. Although he provisionally stepped down from
power in July 2006 because of poor health and ceded power to his brother Raúl (who held the
position of first vice president), Fidel still officially retained his position as head of state and
government. National Assembly elections were held in January 2008, and Fidel was once again
among the slate of candidates elected to the legislative body. But as the new Assembly was
preparing to select the members of the Council of State from among its ranks in February 2008,
Fidel announced that he would not accept the position as president of the Council of State. This
announcement confirmed his departure as titular head of the Cuban government, and Raúl was
selected as president.
More than 10 years after stepping down from power, Fidel Castro died in November 2016 at 90
years of age. While out of power, Fidel had continued to author essays published in Cuban media
that cast a shadow on Raúl Castro’s rule, and many Cubans reportedly believed that he had
encouraged so-called hard-liners in Cuba’s Communist Party and government bureaucracy to
slow the pace of economic reforms advanced by his brother.3 His death accentuated the
generational change that has already begun in the Cuban government and a passing of the older
generation of the 1959 revolution.
Political Conditions
Current President Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez was selected by Cuba’s National Assembly of
People’s Power to succeed 86-year-old Raúl Castro on April 19, 2018, after Castro completed his
second five-year term as president. Most observers saw Díaz-Canel, who had been serving as first
vice president since 2013, as the “heir apparent,” but Raúl will continue in his position as first
secretary of the PCC until 2021. Cuba does not have direct elections for president. Instead,
Cuba’s legislature, the National Assembly of People’s Power, selects the president of the
country’s 31-member Council of State; the president, pursuant to Cuba’s constitution (Article 74),
serves as Cuba’s head of state and government.
Raúl Castro had succeeded his long-ruling brother Fidel Castro in 2006, serving provisionally
until 2008 and then officially serving two five-year terms as president. He had announced in 2013
that he would not seek a third term, in line with his government’s imposition of a two-term limit
3 Simon Gardner and Sarah Marsh, “Fidel Gone and Trump Looming, Cuban Businesses Count on More Reforms,”
Reuters, November 29, 2016.
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in 2012. Under Raúl, Cuba implemented gradual market-oriented economic policy changes over
the past decade, but critics maintain that the government did not take enough action to foster
sustainable economic growth.
Elections for the 605 member-National Assembly (as well as for 15 provincial assemblies) had
been expected to be held in January 2018, but the elections were postponed until March 2018.
The delay was not unexpected since Cuba’s municipal elections, scheduled for September 2017,
had been postponed to November 2017 because of significant damage caused by Hurricane Irma.
The municipal contests involved the direct election of more than 12,000 officials among 27,000
candidates, but the electoral process was tightly controlled, with the government preventing 175
independent candidates from being nominated. Candidates for the National Assembly and
provincial assemblies were also tightly controlled by candidacy commissions, and voters were
presented with one candidate for each position.
Cuba’s Political Transition to a New President
President Díaz-Canel, who turned 58 a day after becoming president, is an engineer by training.
His appointment as first vice president in 2013 made him the official constitutional successor in
case Castro died or could not fulfill his duties. His appointment also represented a move toward
bringing about generational change in Cuba’s political system. Díaz-Canel became a member of
the Politburo in 2003 (the PCC’s highest decisionmaking body), held top PCC positions in two
provinces, and was higher education minister from 2009 until 2012, when he was tapped to
become a vice president on the Council of State.
Although some observers believed Díaz-Canel to be a moderate and more open to reform, a
leaked video released in August 2017 appears to contradict that characterization. The video shows
him speaking at a closed Communist Party meeting earlier in the year in which he strongly
criticized dissidents and independent voices (including those arguing for reform of the socialist
system), criticized the expansion of Cuba’s private sector, and characterized U.S. efforts toward
normalization under President Obama as an attempt to destroy the Cuban revolution. Some
observers believe that Díaz-Canel’s rhetoric could have been aimed at increasing his acceptance
by so-called hard-liners in Cuba’s political system who are more resistant to change.4
Cuba’s political transition is notable because it is the first time since the 1959 Cuban revolution
that a Castro is not in charge of the government. A majority of Cubans today have lived under the
rule only of the Castros. Raúl’s departure can be viewed as a culmination of the generational
leadership change that began several years ago in the government’s lower ranks.
It is also the first time that Cuba’s head of government is not leader of the PCC. Although
separating the roles of government and party leaders could elevate the role of government
institutions over the PCC, Raúl Castro has indicated that he expects Díaz-Canel to take over as
first secretary of the PCC when his term as party leader ends.5
Another element of the transition is the composition of the new 31-member Council of State. The
National Assembly selected 72-year-old Salvador Valdés Mesa as First Vice President, not from
the younger generation, but also not from the historical revolutionary period. Valdés Mesa, who
4 Nora Gámez Torres, “Video Offers Rare Glimpse of Hardline Ideology from Presumed Next Leader,” Miami Herald,
August 22, 2017; and William M. LeoGrande, “Cuba After Castro: The Coming Elections and a Historic Changing of
the Guard,” World Politics Review, October 17, 2017.
5 Anthony Failoa, “Castros’ Successor, Miguel Díaz-Canel, Takes Over in Cuba, Pledges ‘Continuity,’” Washington
Post, April 19, 2018.
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already had been serving as one of five vice presidents and is on the Politburo, is the first Afro-
Cuban to hold such a high government position. Of the Council of State’s members, 45% are
new, 48% are women, and 45% are Afro-Cuban or mixed race. Several older revolutionary-era
leaders remained on the Council, including Ramiro Valdés, 86 years old, who continues as a vice
president.6 Nevertheless, the average age of Council of State members was 54, with 77% born
after the 1959 Cuban revolution.7
Challenges for President Díaz-Canel. Although most observers do not anticipate immediate
major policy changes under President Díaz-Canel, his government will face two enormous
challenges—reforming the economy and responding to desires for greater freedom.
Raúl Castro managed the opening of Cuba’s economy to the world, with diversified trade
relations, increased foreign investment, and a growing private sector.8 Yet the slow pace of
economic reform has stunted economic growth and disheartened Cubans yearning for more
economic freedom. Over the past year, the government appeared to backtrack by restricting
private-sector development and slowing reforms, and for several years the government has
delayed a long-anticipated end to its dual-currency system that creates economic distortion (see
“Economic Conditions” below).9 A challenge for Díaz-Canel will be moving forward with
economic reforms opposed by some conservative elements in the party and state bureaucracy.10
Few observers expect the Díaz-Canel government to ease tight control over the political system,
at least in the short to medium term, but it will need to contend with increasing calls for political
reform and freedom of expression.11 The liberalization of some individual freedoms that occurred
under Raúl Castro (such as legalization of cell phones and personal computers, and expansion of
internet connectivity) has increased Cubans’ appetite for access to information and the desire for
more social and political expression. More broadly, if the next government continues to repress
political dissidents and human rights activists, it will remain a point of contention in Cuba’s
foreign relations.
An important question looking ahead is the extent of influence that Castro and other revolutionary
figures will have on government policy. Some observers believe that Raúl will continue to have a
role in the decisionmaking process because he will head the PCC until 2021.The former president
headed up a commission that drafted changes to the 1976 constitution approved by Cuba’s
National Assembly in July 2018. Also in July, President Díaz-Canel named his Council of
Ministers or Cabinet, but a majority of ministers are holdovers from the Castro government,
including those occupying key ministries such as defense, interior, and foreign relations; just 9 of
6 “Members of the Council of State to the Ninth Legislature of the National Assembly of People’s Power,” Granma,
April 20, 2018; Mimi Whitefield, “Cuba Diversifies Key Government Posts with Somewhat Younger But Loyal
Leadership,” Miami Herald, April 27, 2018; and Nelson Acosta, “Factbox: Who’s Who at the Top of Cuba’s New
Government,” Reuters News, April 19, 2019.
7 William LeoGrande, “Cuba’s New Generation Takes the Helm with an Immediate Test: the Economy,” World
Politics Review, April 24, 2018.
8 Richard E. Feinberg, Order from Chaos, What Will Be Raúl Castro’s Legacy? December 4, 2017; and “Cuba Tightens
Regulations on Nascent Private Sector,” Reuters News, December 21, 2017.
9 Sarah Marsh, “Cuba’s Communist Party Admits Errors, Slowdown in Reforms,” Reuters News, March 27, 2018; and
Mimi Whitefield, “Cuba Desperately Needs to Reform Currency System, But Timing Couldn’t Be Worse,” Miami
Herald, April 4, 2018.
10 William M. LeoGrande, “Cuba’s Getting a New President,” The Conversation, April 18, 2018.
11 Mimi Whitefield, “As the Selection of a New President Approaches, Cubans Say They Want Meaningful Change,”
Miami Herald, March 1, 2018.
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26 ministers are new, including 2 vice presidents and 7 new ministers.12 After Díaz-Canel marked
his first 100 days in office in July, some observers maintained that little had changed politically or
economically.
Constitutional Changes. As noted, Cuba is in the midst of a process to rewrite and update its
1976 constitution. Drafted by a commission headed by Raúl Castro and approved by the National
Assembly on July 22, 2018, the proposed changes will be subject to public debate in thousands of
workplaces and community meetings into November. After considering public suggestions, the
National Assembly will make any needed additional changes and vote again on the draft
constitution, after which it will be subject to a public referendum, likely by next February 2019.13
Among the proposed changes are the addition of an appointed prime minster to oversee
government operations, an age limit of 60 to become president and a limit of two five-year terms,
the right to own private property, businesses and non-agricultural cooperatives, and changes to
the definition of marriage that eventually could lead to same-sex marriage. However, the draft
constitution still ensures the state’s control over the economy and the role of centralized planning,
and the Communist Party still would be the only recognized party.14
Human Rights
The Cuban government has a poor record on human rights, with the government sharply
restricting freedoms of expression, association, assembly, movement, and other basic rights since
the early years of the Cuban revolution. The government has continued to harass members of
human rights and other dissident organizations. These organizations include the Ladies in White
(Las Damas de Blanco), currently led by Berta Soler, formed in 2003 by the female relatives of
the “group of 75” dissidents arrested that year, and the Patriotic Union of Cuba (UNPACU), led
by José Daniel Ferrer García, established in 2011 by several dissident groups with the goal of
fighting peacefully for civil liberties and human rights; in August 2018, the Cuban government
imprisoned Ferrer arbitrarily for 11 days with no access to his family, according to Amnesty
International. In recent years, several political prisoners have conducted hunger strikes; two
hunger strikers died—Orlando Zapata Tamayo in 2010 and Wilman Villar Mendoza in 2012. In
February 2017, Hamel Santiago Maz Hernández, a member of UNPACU who had been
imprisoned since June 2016 after being accused of descato (lack of respect for the government),
died in prison.15
Although the human rights situation in Cuba remains poor, the country has made some advances
in recent years. In 2008, Cuba lifted a ban on Cubans staying in hotels that previously had been
restricted to foreign tourists in a policy that had been pejoratively referred to as “tourist
apartheid.” In recent years, as the government has enacted limited economic reforms, it has been
much more open to debate on economic issues. In 2013, Cuba eliminated its long-standing policy
of requiring an exit permit and letter of invitation for Cubans to travel abroad. The change has
allowed prominent dissidents and human rights activists to travel abroad and return to Cuba.
12 Sarah Marsh, Nelson Acosta, and Marc Frank, “Cuba’s New President Names Cabinet Resembling Castro’s” Reuters
News, July 21, 2018; and Mimi Whitefield, “Continuity But Some New Faces as Cuba’s Parliament Selects Ministers,”
Miami Herald, July 21 2018.
13 Mimi Whitefield, “Cuba Plans 135,000 Meetings to Get Public Feedback on Its Proposed Constitution,” Miami
Herald, August 1, 2018.
14 Marc Frank, “Cuba’s Proposed New Constitution: What Will Change,” Reuters News, August 13, 2018.
15 “La CCDHRN denuncia la muerte de un preso politico a la espera de juicio,” 14ymedio.com, March 7, 2017.
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Congressional Resolutions. On April 11, 2018, the Senate approved S.Res. 224 (Durbin), which
commemorated the legacy of democracy activist Oswaldo Payá, called on the Cuban government
to allow an impartial, third-party investigation into the circumstances surrounding Payá’s death in
a car accident in July 2012, and called on the Cuban government to cease violating human rights
and begin providing democratic freedoms to Cuban citizens. In 2012, the Senate had approved
S.Res. 525 (Nelson), which honored the life and legacy of Payá and also called for an impartial,
third-party investigation. Payá had founded the Christian Liberation Movement in 1988, a civil
society group advocating peaceful democratic change and respect for human rights. He founded
the Varela Project in 1996, which collected thousands of signatures supporting a national
plebiscite for political reform in Cuba.16
Two similar but not identical resolutions introduced in May 2018, S.Res. 511 (Rubio) and H.Res.
916 (Diaz-Balart), would honor Las Damas de Blanco as the recipient of the 2018 Milton
Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty. The resolutions would also express solidarity and
commitment to the democratic aspirations of the Cuban people and call on the Cuban government
to allow members of the group to travel freely.
Political Prisoners. On October 16, 2018, the State Department’s U.S. Mission to the United
Nations launched a campaign to call attention to the plight of Cuba’s “estimated 130 political
prisoners.” Cuban diplomats attempted to disrupt the event by making noise and shouting,
although their actions appeared to call more attention to the event and, for some observers,
demonstrated the Cuban government’s disdain for freedom of expression.17
In June 2018, the Havana-based Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National
Reconciliation (CCDHRN) estimated that Cuba held 120 prisoners for political reasons,
consisting of 96 opponents or those disaffected toward the regime (over 40 are members of
UNPACU) and 24 accused of employing or planning some form of force or violence.18
According to the State Department’s human rights report on Cuba covering 2017, issued in April
2018, the exact number of political prisoners was difficult to determine, but human rights
organizations estimated that there were 65 to 100 political prisoners. The report noted the lack of
governmental transparency, along with its systematic violations of due process rights, which
masked the nature of criminal charges and prosecutions and allowed the government to prosecute
peaceful human rights activists for criminal violations or “dangerousness.” As noted in the report,
the government refused international humanitarian organizations and United Nations access to its
prisons and detention centers, and closely monitored and often harassed domestic organizations
that tracked political prisoner populations.19
Political activist Dr. Eduardo Cardet, designated by Amnesty International (AI) as a “prisoner of
conscience,” has been imprisoned since November 2016 for publicly criticizing Fidel Castro and
was sentenced to three years in prison. AI maintains that Cardet, a leader in the dissident
16 For background, see “Death of Human Rights Activist Oswaldo Payá” in CRS Report R41617, Cuba: Issues for the
112th Congress, by Mark P. Sullivan.
17 “Jailed for What? Plight of Cuba’s Political Prisoners,” meeting called by the United States, UN Web TV, October
16, 2018, at http://webtv.un.org/search/jailed-for-what-plight-of-cubas-political-prisoners-meeting-called-by-the-
united-states/5849572041001/?term=&lan=english&page=5; U.S. Embassy in Cuba, “Remarks at a U.S. Event
Launching the ‘Jailed for What?’ Campaign Highlighting Cuba’s Political Prisoners,” October 18, 2018.
18 “En Cuba hay 120 prisioneros por motivos políticos, según la CCDHRN,” 14ymedio.com, June 11, 2018; and
Comisión Cubana de Derechos Humanos y Reconciliación Nacional (CCDHRN), “Lista Parcial de Condenados o
Procesados en Cuba por Razones Politicas en Esta Fecha,” June 11, 2018, at https://www.14ymedio.com/nacional/
LISTA-PRESOS-JUNIO_CYMFIL20180611_0001.pdf.
19 U.S. Department of State, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2017, April 20, 2018.
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Christian Liberation Movement, was sent to prison solely for peacefully exercising his right to
freedom of expression and has called for his immediate release. The human rights group issued an
urgent action notice in January 2018 calling attention to Cardet’s case after he was attacked by
several prisoners in December 2017. In June 2018, AI issued another urgent action notice for
Cardet, maintaining that Cuban authorities suspended family visiting rights for him because of his
family’s activism on the case. 20
A second AI-designated prisoner of conscience, Cuban biologist Dr. Ariel Ruiz Urquiola, was
sentenced to a year in prison in May 2018 for the crime of disrespecting authority (desacato).
Urquiola reportedly had referred to several Cuban government forest rangers as “rural guards,” a
derogatory reference to a repressive agency before the Cuban revolution. The rangers had been
checking whether Urquiola had proper permits to cut down several trees and build a fence, which
reportedly he had. In June 2018, AI issued two urgent action notices on Urquiola calling for his
release and for visits while imprisoned. He was conditionally released from prison on July 3,
2018, following a prolonged hunger strike.21
On October 15, 2018, the Cuban government released UNPACU activist Tomás Núñez
Magdariaga from prison after a 62-day hunger strike. Magdariaga had been sentenced to a year in
jail for allegedly making threats to a security agent. The State Department had called for his
release, maintaining he was falsely charged and convicted in a sham trial. Amnesty International
had expressed concern for his health and called on Cuba to make public evidence against him.22
Over the past decade, the Cuban government has released large numbers of political prisoners at
various junctures. In 2010 and 2011, with the intercession of the Cuban Catholic Church, the
government released some 125 political prisoners, including the remaining members of the
“group of 75” arrested in 2003 who were still in prison. In the aftermath of the December 2014
shift in U.S. policy toward Cuba, the Cuban government released another 53 political prisoners,
although several were subsequently rearrested.23 In 2017, the Cuban government released several
political prisoners that had been dubbed “prisoners of conscience” by Amnesty International. This
included graffiti artist Danilo Maldonado Machado (known as El Sexto) who subsequently
testified before a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing in February 2017.24
20 Amnesty International (AI) defines prisoners of conscience as those jailed because of their political, religious, or
other conscientiously held beliefs, ethnic origin, sex, color, language, national or social origin, economic status, birth,
sexual orientation, or other status, provided they have neither used nor advocated violence. Going beyond AI’s narrow
definition of prisoners of conscience, the Cuban government has held a larger number of political prisoners, generally
defined as a person imprisoned for his or her political activities. AI, “Urgent Action, Prisoner of Conscience Attacked
in Prison,” UA: 32/17, January 22, 2018; and AI, “Urgent Action, Family of Prisoner of Conscience Denied Visits,”
June 7, 2018.
21 “Ariel Ruiz Urquiola, condenado a un año de prisión por descato,” 14ymedio (Havana), May 9, 2018; Nora Gámez
Torres, “Cuban Scientist Sentenced to One Year in Prison for ‘Disrespecting’ Government Authority,” Miami Herald,
May 9, 2018; AI, “Urgent Action, Environmental Activist Imprisoned,” June 11, 2018, “Urgent Action, Allow
Environmental Activist Visits,” June 22, 2018, and “Urgent Action, Environmentalist Conditionally Released,” July 11,
2018.
22 “Antes de morirme tengo que ver a mi país libre,” 14ymedio (Havana), October 16, 2018; U.S. Department of State,
“The Wrongful Detention of Tomas Nunez Magdariaga in Cuba,” October 4, 2018; and AI, “Amnesty International
Calls on Cuba to Make Public the Evidence against Tomás Núñez Madariaga (sic),” October 10, 2018.
23 David Adams et al., “How Prisoners Names Were Drawn Up in U.S.-Cuba Secret Talks,” Reuters News, January 12,
2015; Juan O. Tamayo, “Cuba’s Catholic Church Trying to Fill Gaps in Social Safety Net,” Miami Herald, March 14,
2012.
24 Danilo Maldonado Machado, Testimony in U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee
on Western Hemisphere, Transnational Crime, Civilian Security, Democracy, Human Rights, and Global Women’s
Issues, Democracy and Human Rights: The Case for U.S. Leadership, hearing, 115th Cong., 1st sess., February 16,
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Short-Term Detentions. Short-term detentions for political reasons increased significantly from
2010 through 2016, a reflection of the government’s change of tactics in repressing dissent away
from long-term imprisonment. The CCDHRN reports that the number of such detentions grew
annually from at least 2,074 in 2010 to at least 8,899 in 2014. The CCDHRN reported a very
slight decrease to 8,616 short-term detentions in 2015, but this figure increased again to at least
9,940 detentions for political reasons in 2016, the highest level recorded by the human rights
organization.
In 2017, however, the CCDHRN reported a decline in the number of short-term detentions to
5,155, almost half the number detained in 2016 and the lowest level since 2011. The decline in
short-term detentions has continued in 2018. In the first nine months of 2018 (through
September), the CCDHRN reported at least 2,248 short-term detentions for political reasons,
almost a 43% decline compared to the same time period in 2017.25
Bloggers and Civil Society Groups. Over the past several years, numerous independent Cuban
blogs have been established. Cuban blogger Yoani Sánchez has received considerable
international attention since 2007 for her website, Generación Y, which includes commentary
critical of the Cuban government. In May 2014, Sánchez launched an independent digital
newspaper in Cuba, 14 y medio, available on the internet, distributed through a variety of methods
in Cuba, including CDs, USB flash drives, and DVDs.26
The Catholic Church became active in broadening the debate on social and economic issues
through its publications. The Church also has played a role in providing social services, including
soup kitchens, services for the elderly and other vulnerable groups, after-school programs, job
training, and even college coursework.
Estado de SATS, a forum founded in 2010 by human rights activist Antonio Rodiles, has had the
goal of encouraging open debate on cultural, social, and political issues. The group has hosted
numerous events and human rights activities over the years, but it also has been the target of
government harassment, as has its founder.
Other notable online forums and independent or alternative media that have developed include
Cuba Posible (founded by two former editors of the Catholic publication Espacio Laical),
Periodismo del Barrio (focusing especially on environmental issues), El Toque, and OnCuba (a
Miami-based digital magazine with a news bureau in Havana).27
Trafficking in Persons. The State Department released its 2018 Trafficking in Persons (TIP)
Report on June 28, 2018, and for the fourth consecutive year Cuba was placed on the Tier 2
Watch List (in prior years, Cuba had Tier 3 status).28 Tier 3 status refers to countries whose
governments do not fully comply with the minimum standards for combatting trafficking and are
not making significant efforts to do so. In contrast, Tier 2 Watch List status refers to countries
whose governments, despite making significant efforts, do not fully comply with the minimum
standards and still have some specific problems (e.g., an increasing number of victims or failure
2017, at https://www.foreign.senate.gov/download/machado-testimony-021617.
25 CCDHRN, “Cuba: Algunos Actos de Represión Política en el Mes de Septiembre de 2018,” October 3, 2018.
26 Sánchez’s website is available at http://generacionyen.wordpress.com/, and her online digital newspaper is available
at http://www.14ymedio.com/. Access to both sites is usually blocked in Cuba by the government. For a listing of other
blogs from Cuba, see the website of the Cuba Study Group at http://www.cubastudygroup.org/index.cfm/blogs-from-
cuba.
27 Cuba Posible, at https://cubaposible.com/; Periodismo del Barrio, at https://www.periodismodelbarrio.org/; El
Toque, at https://eltoque.com/; and OnCuba, at https://oncubamagazine.com/en/.
28 U.S. Department of State, Trafficking in Persons Report 2018, Cuba, June 28, 2018, at https://www.state.gov/j/tip/
rls/tiprpt/countries/2018/282640.htm.
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to provide evidence of increasing antitrafficking efforts) or whose governments have made
commitments to take additional antitrafficking steps over the next year. A country normally is
automatically downgraded to Tier 3 status if it is on the Tier 2 Watch List for three consecutive
years unless the Secretary of State authorizes a waiver. The State Department issued such a
waiver for Cuba in 2017 because the government had devoted sufficient resources to a written
plan that, if implemented, would constitute significant efforts to meet the minimum standards for
the elimination of trafficking. In the 2018 TIP report, the State Department again issued a waiver
for Cuba allowing it to remain on the Tier 2 Watch List for the fourth consecutive year. Such a
waiver, however, is only permitted for two years. After the third year, the country must either go
up to Tier 2 or down to Tier 3.
The State Department initially upgraded Cuba from Tier 3 to Tier 2 Watch List status in its 2015
TIP report because of the country’s progress in addressing and prosecuting sex trafficking,
including the provision of services to sex-trafficking victims, and its continued efforts to address
sex tourism and the demand for commercial sex.29
In its 2016 TIP report, the State Department maintained that Cuba remained on the Tier 2 Watch
List for the second consecutive year because the country did not improve antitrafficking efforts
compared to 2015. Nevertheless, the 2016 report noted that the Cuban government continued
efforts to address sex trafficking, including prosecution and conviction, and the provision of
services to victims. The State Department noted that the Cuban government released a report on
its antitrafficking efforts in October 2015; that multiple government ministries were engaged in
antitrafficking efforts; and that the government funded child protection centers and guidance
centers for women and families, which served crime victims, including trafficking victims.
However, the report also noted that the Cuban government did not prohibit forced labor, report
efforts to prevent forced labor, or recognize forced labor as a possible issue affecting Cubans in
medical missions abroad.30
In its 2017 TIP report, the State Department maintained that the Cuban government demonstrated
significant efforts during the reporting period by prosecuting and convicting sex traffickers,
providing services to sex trafficking victims, releasing a written report on its antitrafficking
efforts, and coordinating antitrafficking efforts across government ministries. The State
Department noted, however, that the Cuban penal code did not criminalize all forms of trafficking
and did not prohibit forced labor, report efforts to prevent forced labor domestically, or recognize
forced labor as a possible issue affecting Cubans working in medical missions abroad.31
In its 2018 TIP report, the State Department noted the Cuban government’s significant efforts of
prosecuting and convicting more traffickers, creating a directorate to provide specialized attention
to child victims of crime and violence, including trafficking, and publishing its antitrafficking
plan for 2017-2020. The State Department also noted, however, that the Cuban government did
not demonstrate increasing efforts compared to the previous reporting period. It maintained that
the government did not criminalize most forms of forced labor or sex trafficking for children ages
16 or 17, and did not report providing specialized services to identified victims. The State
Department also made several recommendations for Cuba to improve its antitrafficking efforts,
including the enactment of a comprehensive antitrafficking law that prohibits and sufficiently
punishes all forms of trafficking.
29 U.S. Department of State, Trafficking in Persons Report 2015, Cuba, July 2015.
30 U.S. Department of State, Trafficking in Persons Report 2016, Cuba, June 2016.
31 U.S. Department of State, Trafficking in Persons Report 2017, Cuba, June 2017.
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Engagement between U.S. and Cuban officials on antitrafficking issues has increased in recent
years. In January 2017, U.S. officials met with Cuban counterparts in their fourth such exchange
to discuss bilateral efforts to address human trafficking.32 Subsequently, on January 16, 2017, the
United States and Cuba signed a broad memorandum of understanding on law enforcement
cooperation in which the two countries stated their intention to collaborate on the prevention,
interdiction, monitoring, and prosecution of transnational or serious crimes, including trafficking
in persons.33 In February 2018, the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security
hosted meetings in Washington, DC, with Cuban officials on efforts to combat trafficking in
persons.34
Human Rights Reporting on Cuba
Amnesty International (AI), Cuba, https://www.amnesty.org/en/countries/americas/cuba/.
Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation (Comisión Cubana de Derechos
Humanos y Reconciliación Nacional, CCDHRN), an independent Havana-based human rights organization
that produces a monthly report on short-term detentions for political reasons.
CCDHRN, “Cuba: Algunos Actos de Represión Política en el Mes de Septiembre de 2018,” October 3, 2018, at
https://www.14ymedio.com/nacional/OVERVIEW-SEPTIEMBRE_CYMFIL20181003_0001.pdf.
CCDHRN, “Lista Parcial de Condenados o Procesados en Cuba por Razones Politicas en Esta Fecha,” June 11,
2018, at https://www.14ymedio.com/nacional/LISTA-PRESOS-JUNIO_CYMFIL20180611_0001.pdf.
14ymedio.com, independent digital newspaper, based in Havana, at http://www.14ymedio.com/.
Human Rights Watch (HRW), https://www.hrw.org/americas/cuba.
HRW’s 2018 World Report maintains that “the Cuban government continues to repress dissent and punish public
criticism,” at https://www.hrw.org/world-report/2018/country-chapters/cuba
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Annual Report 2017, March 23, 2018, Chapter IV has a
section on Cuba, at http://www.oas.org/en/iachr/docs/annual/2017/docs/IA2017cap.4bCU-en.pdf.
U.S. Department of State, Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 2017, April 20, 2018, at
https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/277567.pdf.
Economic Conditions
Cuba’s economy continues to be largely state-controlled, with the government owning most
means of production and employing a majority of the workforce. Key sectors of the economy that
generate foreign exchange include the export of professional services (largely medical personnel
to Venezuela); tourism, which has grown significantly since the mid-1990s, with 4.7 million
tourists visiting Cuba in 2017; nickel mining, with the Canadian mining company Sherritt
International involved in a joint investment project; and a biotechnology and pharmaceutical
sector that supplies the domestic health care system and has fostered a significant export industry.
Remittances from relatives living abroad, especially from the United States, also have become an
important source of hard currency, amounting to some $3 billion in 2016. The once-dominant
sugar industry has declined significantly over the past 20 years. Because of drought, damage from
Hurricane Irma, and subsequent months of heavy rains, the 2018 harvest is expected to drop by
32 U.S. Department of State, “United States and Cuba to Hold Meeting to Fight Trafficking in Persons,” media note,
January 11, 2017.
33 U.S. Department of State, “United States and Cuba to Sign Law Enforcement Memorandum of Understanding,”
media note, January 16, 2017.
34 U.S. Department of State, “Western Hemisphere: United States and Cuba Meet to Combat Trafficking in Persons,”
February 14, 2018.
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more than 30% compared to the 2017 harvest of 1.8 million tonnes of sugar; in 1990, Cuba
produced 8.4 million tonnes of sugar.35
For more than 15 years, Cuba has depended heavily on Venezuela for its oil needs. In 2000, the
two countries signed a preferential oil agreement (essentially an oil-for-medical-personnel barter
arrangement) that until recently provided Cuba with some 90,000-100,000 barrels of oil per day,
about two-thirds of its consumption. Cuba’s goal of becoming a net oil exporter with the
development of its offshore deepwater oil reserves was set back in 2012, when the drilling of
three exploratory oil wells was unsuccessful. This setback, combined with Venezuela’s economic
difficulties, has raised Cuban concerns about the security of the support received from Venezuela.
Since 2015, Venezuela has cut the amount of oil that it sends to Cuba, and Cuba has increasingly
turned to other suppliers for its oil needs, including Russia and Algeria. In the summer of 2018,
from June through August, Venezuela reportedly resumed exporting a key crude oil to Venezuela
that it had suspended in 2017 due to needs in Venezuela.36
The government of Raúl Castro implemented a number of economic policy changes, but
economists were disappointed that more far-reaching reforms were not implemented. At the
PCC’s seventh party congress, held in April 2016, Raúl Castro reasserted that Cuba would move
forward with updating its economic model “without haste, but without pause.”37 A number of
Cuba’s economists have pressed the government to enact more far-reaching reforms and embrace
competition for key parts of the economy and state-run enterprises. These economists criticize the
government’s continued reliance on central planning and its monopoly on foreign trade.
Economic Growth.38 Cuba experienced severe economic contraction from 1990 to 1993, with an
estimated decline in gross domestic product ranging from 35% to 50% when the Soviet Union
collapsed and Russian financial assistance to Cuba practically ended. Growth resumed after that
time, as Cuba moved forward with some limited market-oriented economic reforms, and growth
was especially strong in the 2004-2007 period, averaging more than 9% annually. The economy
benefitted from the growth of the tourism, nickel, and oil sectors and from support from
Venezuela and China in terms of investment commitments and credit lines. The economy was
hard-hit by several hurricanes and storms in 2008 and the global financial crisis in 2009, with the
government forced to implement austerity measures that slowed growth. From 2010 to 2015,
Cuba’s economy experienced low to moderate economic growth, ranging from a low of 1% in
2014 to a high of 4.4% in 2015. In 2016, however, the economy grew by just 0.5% because of
lower export earnings, reduced support from Venezuela, and austerity measures (preliminary
Cuban government estimates had forecast an economic contraction of 0.9%, but this was revised
to 0.5% growth in January 2018).39
35 Information and statistics were drawn from several sources: U.S. Department of State, “U.S. Relations with Cuba,”
November 8, 2017; “Cuba Economy: Quick View, Tourism Breaks Another Record in 2017,” EIU ViewsWire,
February 14, 2018; and Marc Frank, “May Output Slows Output of Already Meager Cuban Sugar Harvest,” Reuters
News, May 7, 2018.
36 “Venezuela Resumes Domestic Crude Exports to Cuba – Documents,” Reuters News,
37 Raúl Castro Ruz, “Full Text of Central Report: The development of the national economy, along with the struggle for
peace, and our ideological resolve, constitute the Party’s principal missions,” Granma, April 18, 2016, at
http://en.granma.cu/cuba/2016-04-18/the-development-of-the-national-economy-along-with-the-struggle-for-peace-
and-our-ideological-resolve-constitute-the-partys-principal-missions.
38 Economic growth figures are from the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), Country Data Tool, 2018.
39 Marc Frank, “Cuban Economy Ever More Opaque as Data Omitted from 2016 Accounts,” Reuters News, January
15, 2018; “Cuba Revises Data to Show Economy Grew in 2016,” Reuters News, February 1, 2018; and “Country
Report, Cuba,” EIU, February 2018.
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In December 2017, Cuba’s minister of economy and planning, Ricardo Cabrisas, estimated that
the economy returned to growth of 1.6% in 2017, but in October 2018, the government revised its
growth figure upward to 1.8%.40 Some economists have questioned the reliability of Cuba’s data.
The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) estimates an economic growth rate of 0.9% in 2017 and
forecasts 1.7% growth in 2018, spurred by hurricane-related reconstruction. The biggest threat to
this forecast, according to the EIU, is the complete elimination of support from Venezuela.41
Hurricane Irma, which struck in September 2017, killed 10 people in Cuba and affected more
than 2 million people along 300 miles of the northern coast.42 The storm damaged infrastructure
(electric power, water and sanitation systems), the agricultural sector, and tourism facilities, and it
flooded low-lying areas of Havana.43
Figure 2. Cuba: Real Gross Domestic Product Growth (%), 2005-2017
Source: Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), Country Data Tool, 2018.
Private Sector. The Cuban government employs a majority of the labor force, but the
government has been allowing more private-sector activities. In 2010, the government opened up
a wide range of activities for self-employment and small businesses to almost 200 categories of
work allowed; the number of self-employed rose from 144,000 in 2009 to about 580,000 at the
end of 2017. Analysts contend that the government needs to do more to aid the development of
the private sector, including an expansion of authorized activities to include more white-collar
occupations and state support for credit to support small businesses.44
40 Oscar Figueredo Reinaldo and Irene Pérez, “Economía cubana crece 1,6 por ciento durante el 2017,” CubaDebate,
December 21, 2017; and Oficina Nacional de Estadística e Información, República de Cuba, Anuario Estadístico de
Cuba 2017, Cuentas Nacionales, Edición 2018.
41 “Country Report, Cuba,” EIU, October 2018.
42 Marc Frank, “Irma Lays Waster to Cuba’s Dreams of Prosperity,” Financial Times, September 14, 2017.
43 The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) developed a response plan for Cuba as part
of its coordinating mechanism to identify the most urgent needs and funding required. The plan requested $55.8 million
targeting the needs of almost 2.2 million people most affected by the hurricane. See OCHA, Plan of Action, United
Nations System in Cuba, September 2017.
44 “Cuba: Stuck in the Past,” The Economist, April 1, 2017; Nora Gámez Torres,” Fear is Driving Raúl Castro to Punish
Cuba’s New Entrepreneurial Class,” Miami Herald, August 2, 2017; and “Cuba Tightens Regulations on Nascent
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Since mid-2017, however, the government has taken several steps restricting private-sector
development. In August 2017, it stopped issuing new licenses for 27 private-sector occupations,
including for private restaurants and for renting private residences; closed a fast-growing
cooperative that had provided accounting and business consultancy services; and put restrictions
on construction cooperatives. The government maintains that it took the actions to “perfect” the
functioning of the private sector and curb illicit activities, such as the sale of stolen state property,
tax evasion, and labor violations.
In February 2018, press reports provided details about draft government regulations being
considered that would increase state control over the private sector; limit business licenses to a
single activity, reduce and consolidate the current 200 categories of work to 122 categories, and
limit the size of private restaurants.45 The regulations ultimately were released on July 10, 2018,
and are to take effect in December, at the same time that the government will resume issuing
licenses for business activities that had been frozen since August 2017. The objectives of the new
regulations are to increase taxation oversight of the private sector and to control the concentration
of wealth, but the regulations could stifle the growth of the private sector. Some observers believe
the government’s actions are aimed at slowing private-sector growth because of concerns
regarding that sector’s independence from the government. Others point to the backtracking on
private-sector reforms as a result of concerns about rising inequality.
Currency Unification/Reform. A major challenge for the development of the private sector is
the lack of money in circulation. Most Cubans do not make enough money to support the
development of small businesses. Cuba has two official currencies—Cuban pesos (CUPs) and
Cuban convertible pesos (CUCs); for personal transaction, the exchange rate for the two
currencies is CUP24/CUC1. Most people are paid CUPs, and the minimum monthly wage in
Cuba is 225 CUPs (just over $9), although this minimum wage does not apply to the nonstate
sector. According to the State Department, even with other government support such as free
education, housing, some food, and subsidized medical care, the average monthly wage of 700
CUPs ($29) does not provide for a reasonable standard of living.46 For increasing amounts of
consumer goods, CUCs are used. Cubans with access to foreign remittances or who work in
private-sector activities catering to tourists and foreign diplomats have fared better than those
serving the Cuban market.
The Cuban government announced in 2013 that it would end its dual-currency system and move
toward monetary unification, but the action has been delayed for several years. Currency reform
is ultimately expected to lead to productivity gains and improve the business climate, but an
adjustment would create winners and losers.47 At the PCC’s April 2016 Congress, Raúl Castro
called for moving toward a single currency as soon as possible to resolve economic distortions. In
Private Sector,” Reuters News, December 21, 2017.
45 Raúl Castro Ruz, “We Will Continue to Advance Along the Path Freely Chose By Our People; Full Text of Speech
by Raúl Castro Ruz During the Closing Session of the National Assembly of People’s Power, July 14,” Granma
(Havana) July 17, 2017; Mimi Whitefield, “Cuba Reins in Entrepreneurs Who Take Free Enterprise Too Far,” Miami
Herald, July 31, 2017; “Castro: Time-Out for Small Business and Co-ops,” Cuba Standard Monthly, August 2017;
Nora Gámez Torres, “Feat Is Driving Raúl Castro to Punish Cuba’s New Entrepreneurial Class, Experts Say,” Miami
Herald, August 2, 2017; Sarah Marsh, “Communist-Run Cuba Puts Brakes on Private Sector Expansion,” Reuters,
August 1, 2017; “Cuba Tightens Regulations on Nascent Private Sector,” Reuters News, December 21, 2017; Andrea
Rodriguez, “Castro Freezes Cuban Private Sector, Throws Future in Doubt,” World Press Review, February 1, 2018;
and “Cuban Draft Rules Propose Curtailing Fledging Private Sector,” Reuters News, February 23, 2018.
46 U.S. Department of State, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2017, April 20, 2018.
47 “Cuba: Exchange Rate Unification Approaching,” Latin America Regional Report: Caribbean & Central America,
March 2014.
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January 2018, EU officials visiting Cuba offered technical assistance regarding currency reform
and unification.48 Some economists assert, however, that Cuba is unlikely to go forward with
currency reform this year because of the country’s deep structural economic problems and
because of the ongoing constitutional reform process.49
Agricultural Sector. A reform effort under Raúl Castro focused on the agricultural sector, a vital
issue because Cuba reportedly imports some 70%-80% of its food needs, according to the World
Food Programme.50 In an effort to boost food production, the government turned over idle land to
farmers and given farmers more control over how to use their land and what supplies to buy.
Despite these and other efforts, overall food production has been significantly below targets. In
addition, as noted above, Hurricane Irma caused damage to the agricultural sector, particularly
sugar, in September 2017. As a result, in the first six months of 2018, overall food production
reportedly decreased about 10% to 15% compared to the same period in 2017.51
For Additional Reading on the Cuban Economy
Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy, annual proceedings, at http://www.ascecuba.org/
publications/annual-proceedings/.
Brookings Institution, at https://www.brookings.edu/topic/cuba/.
Richard E. Feinberg, Cuba’s Economy after Raúl Castro: A Tale of Three Worlds, February 2018, at
https://www.brookings.edu/research/cubas-economy-after-raul-castro-a-tale-of-three-worlds/.
Caitlyn Davis and Ted Piccone, Sustainable Development: The Path to Economic Growth in Cuba, June 28, 2017, at
https://www.brookings.edu/research/sustainable-development-the-path-to-economic-growth-in-cuba/.
Richard E. Feinberg and Richard S. Newfarmer, Tourism in Cuba, Riding the Wave Toward Sustainable Prosperity,
December 2, 2016, at https://www.brookings.edu/research/tourism-in-cuba/.
Richard E. Feinberg, The Cuban Economy Could Sing—with a Stronger Score, October 13, 2016, at
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/order-from-chaos/2016/10/13/the-cuban-economy-could-sing-with-a-
stronger-score/.
Ted Piccone and Harold Trinkunas, The Cuba-Venezuela Alliance: The Beginning of the End? June 2014, at
http://www.brookings.edu/research/papers/2014/06/16-cuba-venezuela-alliance-piccone-trinkunas.
The Cuban Economy, La Economia Cubana, website maintained by Arch Ritter, from Carlton University,
Ottawa, Canada, available at http://thecubaneconomy.com/.
Revista Temas (Havana), links to the Cuban journal’s articles on economy and politics, in Spanish, at
http://temas.cult.cu/.
Oficina Nacional de Estadísticas e Información, República de Cuba (Cuba’s National Office of Statistics and
Information), at http://www.one.cu/.
U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, Inc., website at http://www.cubatrade.org/.
Foreign Investment. The Cuban government adopted a new foreign investment law in 2014 with
the goal of attracting increased levels of foreign capital to the country. The law cuts taxes on
profits by half, to 15%, and exempts companies from paying taxes for the first eight years of
operation. Employment or labor taxes also are eliminated, although companies still must hire
labor through state-run companies, with agreed wages. A fast-track procedure for small projects
48 “Europe Offers Technical Help on Currency Unification,” Cuba Briefing, February 5, 2018, Issue 948, The
Caribbean Council.
49 Mimi Whitefield, “Cuba Badly Needs Currency Reform, But It Won’t Happen Yet, Economists Say,” Miami Herald,
July 26, 2018.
50 “Cuba, Current issues and what the World Food Programme is doing,” World Food Programme, at
https://www.wfp.org/countries/cuba.
51 “Cuban Agriculture Faces Another Hard Year as Produce Sales Drop,” Reuters News, September 17, 2018.
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reportedly streamlines the approval process, and the government agreed to improve the
transparency and time of the approval process for larger investments.52
A Mariel Special Development Zone (ZED Mariel) was established in 2014 near the port of
Mariel to attract foreign investment. ZED Mariel currently has approved 31 investment projects,
which are at various stages of development, with 9 currently operational. In November 2017,
Cuba approved a project for Rimco (the exclusive dealer for Caterpillar in Puerto Rico, the U.S.
Virgin Islands, and the Eastern Caribbean) to become the first U.S. company to be located in the
ZED Mariel. Rimco has plans to set up a warehouse and distribution center in 2018 to distribute
Caterpillar equipment. In September 2018, the Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center of
Buffalo, NY, announced it was entering into a joint venture with Cuba’s Center for Molecular
Immunology focused on the development of cancer therapies; the joint venture will be located in
the ZED Mariel.
In November 2017, the Cuban government updated its wish list for foreign investment, which
includes 456 projects representing potential investment of $10.7 billion in such high-priority
areas as tourism, agriculture and food production, oil, the industrial sector, and biotechnology.53
In November 2016, Cuba’s Minister of Foreign Trade and Investment Rodrigo Malmierca said
that since the 2014 foreign investment law was approved, Cuba had attracted just $1.3 billion in
foreign direct investment.54 A year later, in late October 2017, Malmierca stated that Cuba had
approved a total of $4 billion in investment since the 2014 law, with $2 billion alone in 2017; as
news reports note, however, it is unclear how much of the $4 billion has been invested.55
Cuba’s Foreign Relations
During the Cold War, Cuba had extensive relations with, and support from, the Soviet Union,
which provided billions of dollars in annual subsidies to sustain the Cuban economy. This subsidy
system helped to fund an activist foreign policy and support for guerrilla movements and
revolutionary governments abroad in Latin America and Africa. With an end to the Cold War, the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, and the loss of Soviet financial support, Cuba was forced to
abandon its revolutionary activities abroad. As its economy reeled from the loss of Soviet support,
Cuba was forced to open up its economy and engage in economic relations with countries
worldwide. In ensuing years, Cuba diversified its trading partners, although Venezuela under
populist leftist President Hugo Chávez (1999-2013) became one of Cuba’s most important
partners, leading to Cuba’s dependence on Venezuela for oil imports. In 2017, the leading sources
of Cuba’s imports in terms of value were Venezuela (18.1%, down from 40% in 2014), China
(16.3%), and Spain (10.8%); the leading destinations of Cuban exports were Canada (19.4%),
Venezuela (15.6%), China (5.2%), and Spain (8.6%).56
52 “Cuba Approves New Foreign Investment Law,” Latin American Regional Report: Caribbean & Central America,
April 2014; “What’s Changed in Cuba’s New Foreign Investment Law,” Reuters News, March 29, 2014.
53 República de Cuba, Ministerio del Commercio Exterior y La Inversión Extranjera, Cuba, Portfolio of Opportunities
for Foreign Investment, 2017-2018, November 1, 2017, at http://www.cubatrade.org/s/Portfolio-of-opportunities-for-
foreign-investment-2017-2018.pdf.
54 Mimi Whitefield, “Cuba Opens to World at Havana Trade Fair but Few U.S. Companies Are Present,” Miami
Herald, November 1, 2016.
55 Marc Frank, “Cuba Reports Record $2 Bln in Foreign Investment Deals,” Reuters News, October 31, 2017.
56 Statistics drawn from Oficina Nacional de Estadística e Información, República de Cuba, Anuario Estadístico de
Cuba 2017, Sector Externo, Edición 2018.
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Russia. Relations with Russia, which had diminished significantly in the aftermath of the Cold
War, have strengthened somewhat over the past several years. Cuban President Díaz-Canel is
expected to visit Russia on November 1, 2018, on a trip that also will take him to China, North
Korea, Vietnam, and Laos.
Russia’s interest in the broader Latin America and Caribbean region appeared to increase in
response to U.S. actions taken in the aftermath of Russia’s intervention in Georgia in 2008 and
Russia’s annexation of the Crimea region and military intervention in Ukraine in 2014. For many
observers, one of Russia’s main objectives in the Latin American and Caribbean region is to
demonstrate that it is a global power that can operate in the U.S. neighborhood, or “backyard.”57
Just before a 2014 trip to Cuba, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed into law an agreement
writing off 90% of Cuba’s $32 billion Soviet-era debt, with some $3.5 billion to be paid back by
Cuba over a 10-year period that would fund Russian investment projects in Cuba.58 In the
aftermath of Putin’s trip, press reports claimed that Russia would reopen its signals intelligence
facility at Lourdes, Cuba, which had closed in 2002, but President Putin denied that his
government would reopen the facility.59
Trade relations between Russia and Cuba have not been significant, although they grew in 2017
because of new Russian oil exports to Cuba. According to Russian trade statistics, total trade
between the two countries was valued at $290 million in 2017, an almost 17% increase over
2016. This represented less than 2% of Cuba’s trade worldwide. Russia’s imports from Cuba
amounted to almost $14 million in 2017, led by pharmaceutical products and rum, while Russia’s
exports to Cuba amounted to almost $277 million, led by motor vehicles (and parts) and oil.60
Russian energy companies have been involved in oil exploration in Cuba. Gazprom was in a
partnership with the Malaysian state oil company, Petronas, which conducted unsuccessful
deepwater oil drilling off Cuba’s western coast in 2012. The Russian oil company Zarubezhneft
began drilling in Cuba’s shallow coastal waters east of Havana in late 2012 but stopped work in
2013 because of disappointing results. In 2014, Russian energy companies Zarubezhneft and
Rosneft signed an agreement with Cuba’s state oil company Unión Cuba-Petróleo (CUPET) for
the development of an offshore exploration block, and Rosneft agreed to cooperate with Cuba in
studying ways to optimize existing production at mature fields.61 In 2017, Rosneft began to ship
oil to Cuba, a result of Cuba’s efforts to diversify its sources of foreign oil because of Venezuela’s
diminished capacity.62
Russian officials publicly welcomed the improvement in U.S.-Cuban relations under the Obama
Administration, although the change in U.S. policy could be viewed as a potential setback for
Russian overtures in the region. As U.S.-Cuban normalization talks were beginning in Havana in
January 2015, a Russian intelligence ship docked in Havana. In October 2016, a Russian military
official maintained that Russia was reconsidering reestablishing a military presence in Cuba (and
Vietnam), although there was no indication that Cuba would be open to the return of the Russian
57 For example, see R. Evan Ellis, The New Russian Engagement with Latin America: Strategic Position, Commerce,
and Dreams of the Past, United States Army War College, Strategic Studies Institute, June 2015.
58 Anna Andrianova and Bill Faries, “Russia Forgives $32B of Debt, Wants to Do Business in Cuba,” Bloomberg
News, July 13, 2014.
59 “Putin Denies Russia to Reopen Soviet-Era Spy Post in Cuba,” Reuters News, July 17, 2014.
60 Statistics from Federal Customs Service of Russia, as presented by Global Trade Atlas.
61 “Russia Cements Energy Ties with Latin America,” Oil Daily, July 15, 2014.
62 “Russia Resumes Oil Shipments to Cuba, Helps Fill Venezuelan Breach,” Reuters News, May 3, 2017.
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military.63 The two countries signed a bilateral cooperation agreement in December 2016 for
Russia’s support to help Cuba modernize its defense sector until 2020.64
In June 2017, when President Trump announced a partial rollback of the U.S. policy of
engagement with Cuba, Russia’s foreign ministry criticized the president for resorting to “Cold
War” rhetoric.65 Some reports indicate that as U.S. relations with Cuba have deteriorated over the
past year, Russia has been attempting to further increase its ties to Cuba, with high-level meetings
between Cuban and Russian officials and increased economic, military, and cultural
engagement.66 In March 2018, the same Russian intelligence ship noted above again stopped in
Havana.67
For Cuba, a deepening of relations with Russia could help economically, especially regarding oil,
and also could serve as a counterbalance to the partial rollback of U.S. engagement policy by the
Trump Administration.68 Reportedly there has been discussion of significant Russian investment
in upgrading Cuba’s railroads, including a high-speed link between Havana and the beach resort
of Varadero; some observers, however, are skeptical as to whether the project will go forward
given Russia’s struggling economy.69
The U.S. Southern Command’s February 2018 posture statement presented to Congress expressed
concern about Russia’s increased role in the Western Hemisphere. It stated that Russia’s
expanded port and logistics access in Cuba (as well as Nicaragua and Venezuela) provide the
country “with persistent, pernicious presence, including more frequent maritime intelligence
collection and visible force projection in the Western Hemisphere.” It stated that Russia’s robust
relationships with these three countries provides it “with a regional platform to target U.S. and
partner nation facilities and assets, exert negative influence over undemocratic governments, and
employ strategic options in the event of a global contingency.”70 Along these lines, there has been
concern in Congress about the role of Russia in Latin America, including in Cuba. The
conference report to the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for FY2019, P.L.
115-232 (H.R. 5515), requires the Defense Intelligence Agency to submit a report on security
cooperation between Russia, and Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, including a description of any
military or intelligence infrastructure, facilities, and assets developed by Russia in the three
countries and any associated agreements or understanding between Russia and the three
countries.
63 Andrew Roth, “Russia Has Its Permanent Air Base in Syria; Now It’s Looking at Cuba and Vietnam,” Washington
Post, October 8, 2016; and Mimi Whitefield, “Russian Media Report: Kremlin Considering Reopening Bases in Cuba,
Vietnam,” Miami Herald, October 7, 2016.
64 “Russia to Help Cuba Upgrade Armed Forces,” TASS World Service Wire, December 15, 2016; “Russia, Cuba Sign
Program on Defense Technology Cooperation,” Sputnik News Service, December 8, 2016.
65 “Russia Criticizes Donald Trump’s Cuba Policy; Calls it ‘Cold War’ Rhetoric,” Deutsche Welle, June 18, 2017.
66 Nora Gámez Torres, “Amidst Growing Tensions with the U.S., Cuba Gets Cozier with Russia,” Miami Herald,
October 13, 2017; and Nora Gámez Torres and Antonio Maria Delgado, “Goodbye Venezuela, Hello Russia. Can
Vladimir Putin Save Cuba?” Miami Herald, December 26, 2017.
67 Nora Gámez Torres, “Russian Spy Ship Is Docked in Havana Harbor,” Miami Herald, March 16, 2018.
68 “Cuba Looks More to Russia as the Prospects for Better U.S. Ties Fade Under Trump,” (interview with William M.
LeoGrande) World Politics Review, January 2, 2018.
69 “Cuba Boost Trade Ties with Cold War Ally Russia as U.S. Disengages,” Reuters News, December 19, 2017.
70 United States Southern Command, “Posture Statement of Admiral Kurt W. Tidd,” Senate Armed Services
Committee, February 15, 2018, at http://www.southcom.mil/Media/Special-Coverage/2018-Posture-Statement-to-
Congress/.
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China. During the Cold War, Cuba and China did not have close relations because of Sino-Soviet
tensions, but bilateral relations with China have grown closer over the past 15 years, including a
notable increase in trade. Since 2004, Chinese leaders have made a series of visits to Cuba: then-
President Hu Jintao visited in 2004 and 2008; President Xi Jinping visited in 2014 (and when he
was vice president in 2011); and, most recently, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang visited in 2016,
reportedly signing some 30 economic cooperation agreements.71 Raúl Castro also visited China in
2008 and 2012; during the 2012 trip, he signed cooperation agreements focusing on trade and
investment issues. As noted above, Cuban President Díaz-Canel is scheduled to visit China in
early November 2018 (as well as Russia, North Korea, Vietnam, and Laos).
In January 2018, Raúl Castro met with Song Tong, a special envoy of President Xi Jinping, with
discussion reportedly focused on strengthening ties. Castro noted that the Cuban Communist
Party (PCC) would like to promote exchanges with its Chinese counterpart in an effort to help
upgrade Cuba’s social and economic model.72 While Cuba’s relationship with China undoubtedly
has an ideological component since both are the among the world’s remaining communist
regimes, economic linkages and cooperation appear to be the most significant component of
bilateral relations.
According to Cuban trade statistics, total Cuba-China trade in 2017 was valued at almost $2
billion (accounting for 16.1% of Cuba’s trade worldwide), with Cuba exporting $364 million to
China and importing almost $1.7 billion. This was a 21% drop from 2016, when total Cuba-China
trade almost reached $2.6 billion, and an almost 30% drop in Cuba’s imports from China in
2016.73 The fall in imports from China in reflects Cuba’s difficult economic situation as
Venezuelan support has diminished. In response to a cash crunch, the Cuban government has cut
imports and reduced the use of fuel and electricity.74 In contrast to declining imports from China,
Cuba’s exports to China increased by about 42% in 2017, led by increased exports of seafood,
nickel, and to a lesser extent cigars.75 According to Chinese trade statistics, the lion’s share of
Cuba’s exports to China in 2017 were sugar (53%), nickel (35%), and fish (almost 9%), whereas
Cuba’s imports from China included electrical machinery and equipment (22%), motor vehicles
(17%), machinery and appliances (15%), and a wide variety of other industrial and consumer
products.76
China reportedly had been reluctant to invest in Cuba because of the uninviting business
environment, but that has begun to change over the past several years. In 2015, the Chinese
cellphone company Huawei reached an agreement with the Cuban telecommunications company
ETECSA to set up Wi-Fi hotspots at public locations, and is helping to wire homes. In 2016, the
Chinese company Haier set up a plant assembling laptops and tablets in Cuba. Over the past two
years, Chinese financing has been supporting the modernization of a port in Santiago Cuba. Other
planned Chinese investment projects reportedly include pharmaceuticals as well as the tourism
sector involving two hotels and a golf course.77
71 “China, Cuba Agree to Deepen Ties During PM Li’s Havana Visit,” Reuters News, September 24, 2016.
72 “Raúl Castro Meets Xi’s Special Envoy on Advancing Ties,” Xinhuanet, January 25, 2018.
73 ONEI, República de Cuba, Anuario Estadístico de Cuba 2017, Edición 2018.
74 “China’s Exports to Cuban Slump as Island’s Cash Crunch Deepens,” Reuters News, December 6, 2017.
75 “Cuban Cigar Sales Hit Record as China Demand Surges,” Reuters News, February 26, 2018.
76 Statistics from China Customs, as presented by Global Trade Atlas.
77 “Cuba Welcomes More Chinese Investment, Visitors to Boost Tourism,” Xinhua, September 20, 2018; “China Piles
into Cuba as Venezuela Fades and Trump Looms,” Reuters News, February 14, 2017; Nathan Hodge and Josh Chin,
“China Apt to Fill U.S.-Cuba Breach,” Wall Street Journal, November 30, 2016; “Feature: China Helps Convert
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link to page 19 link to page 19 Cuba: U.S. Policy in the 115th Congress
European Union. The European Union (EU) and Cuba held seven rounds of talks from 2014 to
2016 on a Political Dialogue and Cooperation Agreement covering political, trade, and
development issues; ultimately, a cooperation agreement was reached and initialed in Havana in
March 2016 and the European Council signed the agreement in December 2016. The agreement
was submitted to the European Parliament, which overwhelmingly endorsed the agreement in
early July 2017, welcoming it as a framework for relations and emphasizing the importance of the
human rights dialogue between the EU and Cuba. The agreement will enter into force in full after
it has been ratified in all EU member states, but the provisional application of the agreement
began in November 2017.78
The new cooperation agreement replaces the EU’s 1996 Common Position on Cuba, which stated
that the objective of EU relations with Cuba included encouraging “a process of transition to
pluralist democracy and respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms.” The position also
had stipulated that full EU economic cooperation with Cuba would depend upon improvements in
human rights and political freedom.79 Nevertheless, the new agreement states that a human rights
dialogue will be established within the framework of the overall political dialogue and has
numerous provisions related to democracy, human rights, and good governance. In October 2018,
the EU and Cuba held their first human rights dialogue under the agreement, with the meeting
addressing issues related to civil and political rights, economic, social and cultural rights, and
multilateral cooperation.80
As noted above, EU officials visiting Cuba in January 2018 offered to provide Cuba with
technical assistance regarding the country’s long-awaited currency unification (see “Economic
Conditions,” above).
Venezuela and Other Latin American Countries. For more than 15 years, Venezuela has been a
significant source of support for Cuba. Dating back to 2000 under populist President Hugo
Chávez, Venezuela began providing subsidized oil and investment to Cuba. For its part, Cuba has
sent thousands of personnel to Venezuela. Cuba has been concerned about the future of
Venezuelan financial support, however, as a result of Chávez’s death in 2013 and Venezuela’s
mounting economic and political challenges since 2014 due to the rapid decline in oil prices and
the unpopularity of the increasingly authoritarian regime of President Nicolás Maduro. As noted
above, oil imports from Venezuela have declined, leading to Cuba’s imposition of austerity
measures and contributing to economic contraction.
Estimates of the number of Cuban personnel in Venezuela vary, but a 2014 Brookings study
reported that “by most accounts there are 40,000 Cuban professionals in Venezuela,” with 75% of
those healthcare workers.81 The roughly 30,000 healthcare personnel include doctors and nurses,
while the balance of Cuban personnel in Venezuela includes teachers, sports instructors, military
Santiago de Cuba into Modernized Port,” Xinhuanet, August 8, 2017; and Ted Piccone, “The Geopolitics of China’s
Rise in Latin America,” Brookings, November 2016, pp. 18-19.
78 European Council, Council of the European Union, “EU-Cuba: Council Opens New Chapter in Relations,” press
release, December 6, 2016, at http://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2016/12/06-eu-cuba-relations/;
and European Parliament, “EU-Cuba Relations: A New Chapter Begins,” July 18, 2017, at
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/IDAN/2017/570485/EXPO_IDA(2017)570485_EN.pdf.
79 European Union, Official Journal of the European Commission, “Common Position of 2 December 1996, Defined by
the Council on the Basis of Article J.2 of the Treaty on European Union, on Cuba,” (96/697/CFSP), December 2, 1996.
80 The Caribbean Council, “First EU-Cuba In-Depth Exchange on Human Rights Takes Place,” Cuba Briefing, October
15, 2018.
81 Ted Piccone and Harold Trinkunas, “The Cuba-Venezuela Alliance: The Beginning of the End?” Latin America
Initiative Policy Brief, Brookings, June 2014, p. 3.
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advisors, and intelligence operatives. According to the Brookings study, various sources estimate
that the number of Cuban military and intelligence advisors in Venezuela range from hundreds to
thousands, coordinated by Cuba’s military attaché in Venezuela. The extent to which the level of
Cuban personnel in Venezuela has declined because of the drop in Venezuelan oil exports to Cuba
and Venezuela’s deepening economic crisis is uncertain, but Cuba may have withdrawn some
personnel.82
Cuba also is engaged in Latin America beyond its close relations with Venezuela. Cuba is a
member of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas, a Venezuelan-led integration and
cooperation scheme founded in 2004 that has been weakened by Venezuela’s economic and
political decline. For several years, Cuba also hosted peace talks between the Colombian
government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which culminated in a peace
agreement in 2016. In 2013, Cuba began deploying thousands of doctors to Brazil in a program
aimed at providing doctors to rural areas, with Cuba earning hard currency for supplying the
medical personnel. Brazil also was a major investor in the development of the port of Mariel,
west of Havana. In September 2018, press reports indicated that Brazil had threatened to suspend
payments to Cuba for the medical personnel because Cuba was almost $18 million in arrears on a
loan from Brazil’s state development bank related to work upgrading the port of Mariel. 83
International and Regional Organizations. Cuba is an active participant in international
forums, including the United Nations (U.N.) and the controversial United Nations Human Rights
Council. Cuba also has received support over the years from the United Nations Development
Programme and the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, both of
which have offices in Havana. Cuba is also a member of the U.N. Economic Commission for
Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC, also known by its Spanish acronym, CEPAL), one of
the five regional commissions of the U.N., and hosted ECLAC’s 37th session in May 2018. U.N.
Secretary-General António Guterres attended the opening of the conference. ECLAC’s Executive
Secretary Alicia Bárcena reaffirmed the organization’s commitment to accompanying Cuba in its
efforts toward achieving sustainable development.84 Bárcena referred to the U.S. embargo on
Cuba as costing Cuba more than $130 billion at current prices, the same estimate as the Cuban
government.85 Since 1991, the U.N. General Assembly (UNGA) has approved a resolution
annually criticizing the U.S. embargo and urging the United States to lift it (see text box below).
Among other international organizations, Cuba was a founding member of the World Trade
Organization, but it is not a member of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, or the
Inter-American Development Bank. In 2016, Cuba signed a memorandum of understanding with
the Development Bank of Latin America (CAF) with the objective of supporting technical
cooperation programs for Cuba’s social and economic development and laying the foundation for
82 Harold Trinkunas, Stanford University, testimony before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on
the Western Hemisphere, hearing on “The Venezuela Crisis: The Malicious Influence of State and Criminal Actors,”
September 13, 2017, at http://docs.house.gov/meetings/FA/FA07/20170913/106398/HHRG-115-FA07-Wstate-
TrinkunasH-20170913.pdf.
83 “Cuba Economy: Quick View – Brazil Reports Cuba is in Arrears on BNDES Loan,” EIU ViewsWire, September
28, 2018.
84 U.N. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, “ECLAC and Cuba Join in a Dialogue About Its
Path to Sustainable Development,” press release, May 7, 2018.
85 “U.S. Trade Embargo Has Cost Cuba $130 Billion, U.N. Says,” Reuters News, May 9, 2018. Also see República de
Cuba, Cuba vs. Bloqueo, June 2018.
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Cuba’s future membership in the CAF; the CAF’s current membership includes 17 Latin
American and Caribbean countries as well as Spain and Portugal.86
Cuba was excluded from
UNGA Votes on the U.S. Embargo
participation in the Organization of
In 2016, the UNGA vote took place on October 26, with 191 in
American States (OAS) in 1962
favor and, for the first time, the United States (and Israel)
because of its identification with
abstaining, instead of voting against the resolution. Then-
Marxism-Leninism, but in 2009, the
Ambassador Samantha Power, the U.S. Permanent Representative
OAS overturned that policy in a
to the United Nations, stated that the resolution demonstrated
move that eventually could lead to
that the U.S. policy of isolation toward Cuba “instead had isolated
the United States.” Power also maintained, however, that the U.S.
Cuba’s reentry into the regional
abstention did not mean that the United States agreed with the
organization in accordance with the
Cuban government’s policies and practices, adding that the United
practices, purposes, and principles of
States remained “profoundly concerned by the serious human
the OAS. Although the Cuban
rights violations that the Cuban government continues to commit
government welcomed the OAS vote
with impunity against its own people.”87
to overturn the 1962 resolution
On November 1, 2017, the United States returned to voting
against the resolution, which was approved by a vote of 191 to 2,
suspending Cuba’s OAS
with Israel also voting against the resolution. U.S. Ambassador to
participation, it asserted that it
the U.N. Nikki Haley asserted that “as long as the Cuban people
would not return to the OAS.90 In
continue to be deprived of their human rights and fundamental
February 2017, Cuba denied OAS
freedoms—as long as the proceeds from trade with Cuba go to
Secretary-General Luis Almagro
prop up the dictatorial regime responsible for denying those
rights—the United States does not fear isolation in this chamber or
entry into the country to accept a
anywhere in the world.”88 Cuban Foreign Minister Rodríguez
democracy award in honor of the
characterized Ambassador Haley’s remarks as “disrespectful,
late democracy activist Oswaldo
offensive, and interventionist” and said that the United States “does
Payá.
not have the slightest moral authority to criticize Cuba.”89
Cuba became a full member of the
Rio Group of Latin American and Caribbean nations in November 2008 and a member of the
succeeding Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) officially established
in December 2011 to boost regional cooperation, but without the participation of the United
States or Canada. In 2013, Cuba assumed the presidency of the organization for one year. Cuba
also hosted the group’s second summit in 2014, which was attended by leaders from across the
hemisphere as well as by then-U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who reportedly raised
human rights issues with Cuban officials.91
86 Marc Jones, “Interview – Latam Development Bank CAF Sees Cuba Joining in Weeks,” Reuters News, January 15,
2016; Development Bank of Latin America (CAF), “CAF and Cuba Sign First Agreement of Understanding To
Establish a Joint Working Agenda,” September 3, 2016.
87 U.S. Department of State, United States Mission to the United Nations, Ambassador Samantha Power, “Remarks at a
UN General Assembly Meeting on the Cuba Embargo,” October 26, 2016.
88 United States Mission to the United Nations, “Remarks at a U.N. General Assembly Meeting on Cuba, Ambassador
Nikki Haley,” November 1, 2017.
89 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba, “72 UNGA: Speech by Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parilla, on the
‘Necessity of Ending the Economic, Commercial, and Financial Blockade Imposed by the United States against Cuba,’
in United Nations Headquarters, “ New York, November 1, 2017, at http://misiones.minrex.gob.cu/en/un/statements/
72-unga-speech-foreign-minister-bruno-rodriguez-parrilla-necessity-ending-economic.
90 For further background, see section on “Cuba and the OAS” in CRS Report R40193, Cuba: Issues for the 111th
Congress, by Mark P. Sullivan; also see CRS Report R42639, Organization of American States: Background and
Issues for Congress, by Peter J. Meyer.
91 “UN Chief Pushes Cuba on ‘Arbitrary Detentions,’” Agence France Presse, January 28, 2014.
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U.S. Policy Toward Cuba
Background on U.S.-Cuban Relations92
In the early 1960s, U.S.-Cuban relations deteriorated sharply when Fidel Castro began to build a
repressive communist dictatorship and moved his country toward close relations with the Soviet
Union. The often tense and hostile nature of the U.S.-Cuban relationship is illustrated by such
events and actions as U.S. covert operations to overthrow the Castro government culminating in
the ill-fated April 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion; the October 1962 missile crisis, in which the United
States confronted the Soviet Union over its attempt to place offensive nuclear missiles in Cuba;
Cuban support for guerrilla insurgencies and military support for revolutionary governments in
Africa and the Western Hemisphere; the 1980 exodus of around 125,000 Cubans to the United
States in the so-called Mariel boatlift; the 1994 exodus of more than 30,000 Cubans who were
interdicted and housed at U.S. facilities in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and Panama; and the 1996
shootdown by Cuban fighter jets of two U.S. civilian planes operated by the Cuban-American
group Brothers to the Rescue, which resulted in the deaths of four U.S. crew members.
Beginning in the early 1960s, U.S. policy toward Cuba consisted largely of isolating the island
nation through comprehensive economic sanctions, including an embargo on trade and financial
transactions. President Kennedy proclaimed an embargo on trade between the United States and
Cuba in February 1962,93 citing Section 620(a) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (FAA),
which authorizes the President “to establish and maintain a total embargo upon all trade between
the United States and Cuba.”94 At the same time, the Department of the Treasury issued the
Cuban Import Regulations to deny the importation into the United States of all goods imported
from or through Cuba.95 The authority for the embargo was later expanded in March 1962 to
include the Trading with the Enemy Act (TWEA).96
In July 1963, the Department of the Treasury revoked the Cuban Import Regulations and replaced
them with the more comprehensive Cuban Assets Control Regulations (CACR)—31 C.F.R. Part
515—under the authority of TWEA and Section 620(a) of the FAA.97 The CACR, which include a
prohibition on most financial transactions with Cuba and a freeze of Cuban government assets in
the United States, remain the main body of Cuba embargo regulations and have been amended
many times over the years to reflect changes in policy. They are administered by the Department
of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) and prohibit financial transactions as
well as trade transactions with Cuba. The CACR also require that all exports to Cuba be licensed
by the Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), under the provisions of
92 For additional background, see CRS Report RL30386, Cuba-U.S. Relations: Chronology of Key Events 1959-1999,
by Mark P. Sullivan.
93 Presidential Documents, “Proclamation 3447, Embargo on All Trade with Cuba,” 27 Federal Register 1085,
February 7, 1962.
94 In October 1960 under the Eisenhower Administration, exports to Cuba were strictly controlled under the authority
of the Export Control Act of 1949 in response to the expropriation of U.S. properties. This action in effect amounted to
an embargo on exports of all products with the exception of certain foods, medicines, and medical supplies.
95 U.S. Department of the Treasury, 27 Federal Register 1116, February 7, 1962.
96 U.S. Department of the Treasury, 27 Federal Register 2765-2766, March 24, 1962.
97 U.S. Department of the Treasury, “Control of Financial and Commercial Transactions Involving Cuba or Nationals
Thereof,” 28 Federal Register 6974-6985, July 9, 1963.
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the Export Administration Act of 1979, as amended (P.L. 96-72; 50 U.S.C. Appendix 2405(j)).98
The Export Administration Regulations (EAR) are found at 15 C.F.R. Sections 730-774.99
Congress subsequently strengthened sanctions on Cuba with enactment of the Cuban Democracy
Act of 1992 (CDA; P.L. 102-484, Title XVII), the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity
(LIBERTAD) Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-114), and the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export
Enhancement Act of 2000 (TSRA; P.L. 106-387, Title IX).
Among its provisions, the CDA prohibits U.S. foreign subsidiaries from engaging
in trade with Cuba and prohibits entry into the United States for any seaborne
vessel to load or unload freight if it has been involved in trade with Cuba within
the previous 180 days unless licensed by the Department of the Treasury. (In
October 2016, OFAC issued a general license for vessels involved in trade with
Cuba.100)
The LIBERTAD Act, enacted in the aftermath of Cuba’s shooting down two U.S.
civilian planes in February 1996, combines a variety of measures to increase
pressure on Cuba and provides for a plan to assist Cuba once it begins the
transition to democracy. Most significantly, the act codified the Cuban embargo
as permanent law, including all restrictions imposed by the executive branch
under the CACR. This provision is noteworthy because of its long-lasting effect
on U.S. policy options toward Cuba. The executive branch is prevented from
lifting the economic embargo without congressional concurrence through
legislation until certain democratic conditions set forth in the law are met,
although the President retains broad authority to amend the regulations therein.
Another significant sanction in Title III of the law holds any person or
government that traffics in U.S. property confiscated by the Cuban government
liable for monetary damages in U.S. federal court. Acting under provisions of the
law, however, all Administrations (including the Trump Administration) have
suspended the implementation of Title III at six-month intervals, most recently in
June 2018.101
TSRA authorizes U.S. commercial agricultural exports to Cuba, but it also
includes prohibitions on U.S. assistance and private financing and requires
“payment of cash in advance” or third-country financing for the exports. The act
also prohibits tourist travel to Cuba.
In addition to these acts, Congress enacted numerous other provisions of law over the years that
impose sanctions on Cuba, including restrictions on trade, foreign aid, and support from
international financial institutions. The State Department also designated the government of Cuba
as a state sponsor of international terrorism in 1982 under Section 6(j) of the Export
98 31 C.F.R. §515.533.
99 See especially 15 C.F.R. §746.2 on Cuba, which refers to other parts of the EAR.
100 A general license provides the authority to engage in a transaction without the need to apply to the Department of
the Treasury for a license. In contrast, a specific license is a written document issued by the Department of the Treasury
to a person or entity authorizing a particular transaction in response to a written license application. U.S. Department of
the Treasury, “Cuban Assets Control Regulations,” 81 Federal Register 71372-71378, October 17, 2016; U.S.
Department of the Treasury, Office of Public Affairs, “Treasury and Commerce Announce Further Amendments to
Cuba Sanctions Regulations,” October 14, 2016.
101 See U.S. Department of State, “Secretary’s Determination of Six Months’ Suspension Under Title III of
LIBERTAD Act,” June 28, 2018. For additional background, see the section on “Helms/Burton Legislation” in CRS
Report RL32730, Cuba: Issues for the 109th Congress, by Mark P. Sullivan.
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Administration Act and other laws because of the country’s alleged ties to international
terrorism.102
Beyond sanctions, another component of U.S. policy has consisted of support measures for the
Cuban people. This support includes U.S. private humanitarian donations, medical exports to
Cuba under the terms of the CDA, U.S. government support for democracy-building efforts, and
U.S.-sponsored radio and television broadcasting to Cuba. The enactment of TSRA by the 106th
Congress also led to the United States becoming one of Cuba’s largest commercial suppliers of
agricultural products. Authorization for purposeful travel to Cuba and cash remittances to Cuba
has constituted an important means to support the Cuban people, although significant
congressional debate has occurred over these issues for many years.
Despite the poor state of U.S.-Cuban relations, several examples of bilateral cooperation took
place over the years in areas of shared national interest. Three areas that stand out are alien
migrant interdiction (with migration accords negotiated in 1994 and 1995), counternarcotics
cooperation (with increased cooperation dating back to 1999), and cooperation on oil spill
preparedness and prevention (since 2011).
Obama Administration Policy
During its first six years, the Obama Administration continued the dual-track policy approach
toward Cuba that had been in place for many years. It maintained U.S. economic sanctions and
continued measures to support the Cuban people, such as U.S. government-sponsored radio and
television broadcasting and funding for democracy and human rights projects.
At the same time, however, the Obama Administration instituted some changes in policy that
advanced support for the Cuban people. In April 2009, at the Summit of the Americas held in
Trinidad and Tobago, President Obama fulfilled a campaign pledge by lifting all restrictions on
family travel and remittances (for more details, see “U.S. Travel to Cuba,” below). The President
said that “the United States seeks a new beginning with Cuba.” While recognizing that it would
take time to “overcome decades of mistrust,” the President said “there are critical steps we can
take toward a new day.” He stated that he was prepared to have his Administration “engage with
the Cuban government on a wide range of issues—from drugs, migration, and economic issues, to
human rights, free speech, and democratic reform.”103 In 2011, the Obama Administration
introduced new measures to further reach out to the Cuban people through increased purposeful
travel (including people-to-people educational travel) and an easing of restrictions on nonfamily
remittances.
Overall, however, engagement with the Cuban government during the Administration’s first six
years was stymied because of Cuba’s December 2009 imprisonment of an American
subcontractor, Alan Gross, who had been working on democracy projects funded by the U.S.
Agency for International Development. Securing the release of Alan Gross became a top U.S.
priority, and the State Department maintained that it was using every appropriate channel to press
for his release.
102 See CRS Report R43835, State Sponsors of Acts of International Terrorism—Legislative Parameters: In Brief, by
Dianne E. Rennack. Cuba’s designation on the state sponsor of terrorism list allowed U.S. nationals injured by an act of
international terrorism to file lawsuits against Cuba in the United States for damages. For information on current
sanctions, see CRS Report R43888, Cuba Sanctions: Legislative Restrictions Limiting the Normalization of Relations,
by Dianne E. Rennack and Mark P. Sullivan.
103 White House, “Remarks by the President at the Summit of the Americas Opening Ceremony,” April 17, 2009.
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Shift Toward Normalizing Relations
On December 17, 2014, President Obama announced major developments in U.S.-Cuban
relations and unveiled a new policy approach toward Cuba. First, he announced that the Cuban
government had released Alan Gross on humanitarian grounds after five years of imprisonment.
He also announced that, in a separate action, the Cuban government released an individual
imprisoned since 1995 who had been an important U.S. intelligence asset in Cuba in exchange for
three Cuban intelligence agents who had been imprisoned in the United States since 1998. In the
aftermath of these releases, President Obama announced a major shift in U.S. policy toward
Cuba, moving away from a sanctions-based policy aimed at isolating Cuba toward a policy of
engagement. The President said that his Administration would “end an outdated approach that, for
decades, has failed to advance our interests.” He maintained that the United States would
continue to raise concerns about democracy and human rights in Cuba but stated that “we can do
more to support the Cuban people and promote our values through engagement.”104
President Obama outlined three major steps to move toward normalization: (1) a review of
Cuba’s designation by the Department of State as a state sponsor of international terrorism; (2)
the reestablishment of diplomatic relations with Cuba; and (3) an increase in travel, commerce,
and the flow of information to and from Cuba.
Rescission of Cuba’s Designation as a State Sponsor of International Terrorism
Cuba was first added to the so-called terrorism list in 1982 pursuant to Section 6(j) of the Export
Administration Act of 1979 and other laws because of its alleged ties to international terrorism
and support for terrorist groups in Latin America. President Obama directed the State Department
to review Cuba’s designation as a state sponsor of terrorism and stated that “at a time when we
are focused on threats from al Qaeda to ISIL, a nation that meets our conditions and renounces
the use of terrorism should not face this sanction.”105
Following the State Department’s review, the President transmitted a report to Congress in April
2015 justifying the rescission, which maintained that Cuba had provided assurances that it would
not support acts of international terrorism.106 No resolutions of disapproval were introduced in
Congress to block the rescission, which paved the way for then-Secretary of State John Kerry to
rescind Cuba’s designation on May 29, 2015, 45 days after the submission of the report to
Congress. Subsequently, to reflect the rescission of Cuba’s designation as a state sponsor of
terrorism in U.S. regulations, the Department of the Treasury’s OFAC amended the Cuban Assets
Control Regulations (CACR) in June 2015 and the Department of Commerce’s BIS amended the
Export Administration Regulations (EAR) in July 2015.107
104 White House, “Statement by the President on Cuba Policy Changes,” December 17, 2014.
105 Ibid.
106 For further information on the Administration’s justification for rescinding Cuba’s state sponsor designation, see the
section on “State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation” in CRS Report R43926, Cuba: Issues and Actions in the 114th
Congress, by Mark P. Sullivan. Also see CRS Report R43835, State Sponsors of Acts of International Terrorism—
Legislative Parameters: In Brief, by Dianne E. Rennack.
107 U.S. Department of the Treasury, “Cuban Assets Control Regulations; Terrorism List Governments Sanctions
Regulations,” 80 Federal Register 34053-34054, June 15, 2015; and U.S. Department of Commerce, “Cuba:
Implementing Rescission of State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation,” 80 Federal Register 43314-43320, July 22,
2015.
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Reestablishment of Diplomatic Relations and Advancement of Engagement
U.S.-Cuban diplomatic relations were severed by the Eisenhower Administration in January 1961
in response to the Cuban government’s demand to decrease the number of U.S. Embassy staff
within 48 hours. In 1977, under the Carter Administration, both countries established Interests
Sections in each other’s capitals to represent each country’s interests. Beginning in January 2015,
the United States and Cuba conducted four rounds of talks on reestablishing relations. Ultimately,
the United States and Cuba reestablished diplomatic relations in July 2015 and embassies were
reopened in Havana and Washington.
With the restoration of diplomatic relations, government-to-government engagement increased
significantly under the Obama Administration. U.S. and Cuban officials held five Bilateral
Commission meetings to coordinate efforts to advance the normalization process.108
Officials negotiated numerous bilateral agreements after the restoration of relations, including
those in the following areas: marine protected areas (November 2015); environmental
cooperation on range of issues (November 2015); direct mail service (December 2015); civil
aviation (February 2016); maritime issues related to hydrography and maritime navigation
(February 2016); agriculture (March 2016); health cooperation (June 2016); counternarcotics
cooperation (July 2016); federal air marshals (September 2016); cancer research (October 2016);
seismology (December 2016); meteorology (December 2016); wildlife conservation (December
2016); animal and plant health (January 2017); oil spill preparedness and response (January
2017); law enforcement cooperation (January 2017); and search and rescue (January 2017). The
United States and Cuba also signed a bilateral treaty in January 2017 delimiting their maritime
boundary in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Bilateral dialogues were held on all of these issues as
well as on other issues including counterterrorism, claims (U.S. property, unsatisfied court
judgments, and U.S. government claims), economic and regulatory issues, human rights,
renewable energy and efficiency, trafficking in persons, and migration.
In March 2016, President Obama traveled to Cuba, the first presidential visit since 1928, with the
goals of building on progress toward normalizing relations and expressing support for human
rights. In a press conference with Raúl Castro, President Obama said that the United States would
“continue to speak up on behalf of democracy, including the right of the Cuban people to decide
their own future.”109 He also spoke out forcefully for advancing human rights during his televised
speech to the Cuban nation. He stated his belief that citizens should be free to speak their minds
without fear and that the rule of law should not include arbitrary detentions.110
In October 2016, President Obama issued a presidential policy directive on the normalization of
relations with Cuba.111 The directive set forth the Administration’s vision for normalization of
relations and laid out six medium-term objectives: (1) government-to-government interaction; (2)
engagement and connectivity; (3) expanded commerce; (4) economic reform; (5) respect for
universal human rights, fundamental freedoms, and democratic values; and (6) Cuba’s integration
into international and regional systems. The directive also outlined the roles and responsibilities
for various U.S. departments and agencies to move the normalization process forward. It noted
108 U.S. Department of State, “United States and Cuba Hold Fifth Bilateral Commission Meeting in Havana,” media
note, December 7, 2016, at https://2009-2017.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2016/12/264968.htm.
109 White House, “Remarks by President Obama and President Raúl Castro of Cuba in a Joint Press Conference,”
March 21, 2016.
110 White House, “Remarks by President Obama to the People of Cuba,” March 22, 2016.
111 White House, “Presidential Policy Directive – United States-Cuba Normalization,” October 14, 2016, at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2016/10/14/presidential-policy-directive-united-states-cuba-
normalization.
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that the Administration would seek to build support in Congress to lift the embargo and other
statutory provisions constraining efforts to normalize economic relations with Cuba. The directive
can be viewed as an attempt to keep up the momentum toward normalizing relations in the next
Administration and to protect the changes that have been made to date in U.S. policy toward
Cuba. (As noted below, however, President Trump issued a national security presidential
memorandum on June 16, 2017, that superseded and replaced the October 2016 policy directive.)
Increase in Travel, Commerce, and the Flow of Information
The Obama Administration’s third step of increasing travel, commerce, and the flow of
information to and from Cuba required amendments to U.S. regulations—the CACR and EAR—
administered, respectively, by the Department of the Treasury’s OFAC and the Commerce
Department’s BIS. To implement the President’s new policy, the two agencies issued five rounds
of amendments to the CACR and EAR in January and September 2015 and in January, March,
and October 2016.112
The Treasury and Commerce Department amendments to the regulations eased restrictions on
travel, remittances, trade, telecommunications, and banking and financial services. They also
authorized certain U.S. companies or other entities to have a physical presence in Cuba, such as
an office, retail outlet, or warehouse. These entities include news bureaus, exporters of authorized
goods to Cuba, entities providing mail or parcel transmission services, telecommunication or
internet-based service providers, entities organizing or conducting certain educational activities,
religious organizations, and carrier and travel service providers. (For more on the regulatory
changes, see “U.S. Travel to Cuba” and “U.S. Exports and Sanctions,” below.)
Such changes fall within the scope of the President’s discretionary licensing authority to make
changes to the embargo regulations. When President Obama unveiled his policy shift, however,
he acknowledged that he did not have the authority to lift the embargo because it was codified in
permanent law (Section 102(h) of the LIBERTAD Act). As noted above, the LIBERTAD Act ties
the lifting of the embargo to conditions in Cuba (including that a democratically elected
government is in place). Lifting the overall economic embargo would require amending or
repealing the LIBERTAD Act as well as other statutes that have provisions impeding normal
economic relations with Cuba, such as the CDA and TSRA.
112 U.S. Department of Commerce, “Cuba: Providing Support for the Cuban People,” 80 Federal Register 2286-2291,
January 16, 2015; U.S. Department of the Treasury, “ Cuban Assets Control Regulations,” 80 Federal Register 2291-
2302, January 16, 2015; U.S. Department of Commerce, “Enhancing Support for the Cuban People,” 80 Federal
Register 56898-56904, September 21, 2015; U.S. Department of the Treasury, “Cuban Assets Control Regulations,” 80
Federal Register 56915-56926, September 21, 2015; U.S. Department of Commerce, “Cuba Licensing Policy
Revision,” 81 Federal Register 4580-4583, January 27, 2016; U.S. Department of the Treasury, “Cuban Assets Control
Regulations 81 Federal Register 4583-4586, January 27, 2016; U.S. Department of Commerce, “Cuba: Revisions to
License Exceptions and Licensing Policy,” 81 Federal Register 13972-13974, March 16, 2016; U.S. Department of the
Treasury, “Cuban Assets Control Regulations,” 81 Federal Register 13989-13994, March 16, 2016; U.S. Department
of Commerce, “Cuba: Revisions to License Exceptions,” 81 Federal Register 71365-71367, October 17, 2016; and
U.S. Department of the Treasury, “Cuban Assets Control Regulations,” 81 Federal Register 71372-71378, October 17,
2016. For background on the regulatory changes, see U.S. Department of the Treasury, “Cuba Sanctions,” at
https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Programs/Pages/cuba.aspx; U.S. Department of the Treasury,
“Frequently Asked Questions Related to Cuba,” at https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Programs/
Documents/cuba_faqs_new.pdf; U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security, “Cuba,” at
https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/policy-guidance/country-guidance/sanctioned-destinations/cuba; and U.S.
Department of Commerce, “Cuba, Frequently Asked Questions,” at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/forms-
documents/doc_download/1446-bis-cuba-consolidated-faqs.
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Trump Administration Policy
During the electoral campaign, then-candidate Trump said he would cancel or reverse President
Obama’s policy on Cuba unless Cuba took action to improve political and religious freedom and
free political prisoners.113 After Fidel Castro’s death in November 2016, then-President-elect
Trump issued a statement referring to Castro as a “brutal dictator who oppressed his own people
for nearly six decades.”114 This statement was followed by a longer message maintaining that “If
Cuba is unwilling to make a better deal for the Cuban people, the Cuban/American people and the
U.S. as a whole, I will terminate [the] deal.”115
In February 2017, the White House maintained that the Trump Administration was conducting a
full review of U.S. policy toward Cuba and that human rights would be at the forefront of those
policy discussions.116 In May 2017, then-Acting Assistant Secretary of State for Western
Hemisphere Affairs Francisco Palmieri emphasized that “one of the areas that is going to be a
high priority is ensuring that Cuba makes more substantive progress toward a greater respect for
human rights inside the country.”117
On May 20, 2017, President Trump issued a statement to the Cuban American community and the
people of Cuba in celebrating the anniversary of Cuban independence. That date is in
commemoration of Cuba’s independence from the United States in 1902 in the aftermath of the
Spanish-American War in 1898, but is not celebrated in Cuba because of the continued U.S.
intervention in Cuba under the Platt Amendment until its repeal in 1935 (see “Brief Historical
Background” above). In the strongly worded statement, President Trump said, “The Cuban people
deserve a government that peacefully upholds democratic values, economic liberties, religious
freedoms, and human rights, and my Administration is committed to achieving that vision.”118
Cuba’s state television published an “official note” describing the statement as “controversial and
ridiculous.”119
Partial Rollback of Engagement Policy
President Trump unveiled his Administration’s policy on Cuba on June 16, 2017, which partially
rolls back some of the Obama Administration’s efforts to normalize relations with Cuba.
President Trump set forth his Administration’s policy in a speech in Miami, FL, where he signed
a national security presidential memorandum (NSPM) on Cuba replacing President Obama’s
October 2016 presidential policy directive (discussed above), which had laid out objectives for
the normalization process. The new policy leaves most of the Obama-era policy changes in place,
including the reestablishment of diplomatic relations and a variety of eased sanctions to increase
travel and commerce with Cuba. The new policy also keeps in place the Obama Administration’s
action ending the so-called wet foot/dry foot policy toward Cuban migrants, which, according to
113 Jeremy Diamond, “Trump Shifts on Cuba, Says He Would Reverse Obama’s Deal,” CNN, September 16, 2016.
114 Eugene Scott, “Donald Trump: Fidel Castro Is Dead!” CNN, November 26, 2016.
115 Donald Trump @realDonaldTrump, Twitter, November 28, 2016.
116 White House, Press Briefing by Press Secretary Sean Spicer, February 3, 2017.
117 “U.S. to Press Cuba on Human Rights,” Agence France Presse, May 9, 2017.
118 White House, “Statement from President Donald J. Trump on Cuban Independence Day,” May 20, 2017.
119 “Cuba TV Rejects Trump 20 May Message as ‘Ridiculous,’” BBC Monitoring Americas (summary of report by
Cubavision TV on May 20), May 22, 2017; and Nora Gámez Torres, “Havana Lashes Out Against Trump’s May 20
Message to the Cuban People,” Miami Herald, May 22, 2017.
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the NSPM, had “encouraged untold thousands of Cuban nationals to risk their lives to travel
unlawfully to the United States.”120
The most significant policy changes set forth in President Trump’s NSPM included (1)
restrictions on financial transactions with companies controlled by the Cuban military,
intelligence, or security services or personnel and (2) the elimination of individual people-to-
people travel. President Trump’s memorandum directed the heads of departments (Treasury and
Commerce, in coordination with the State Department) to initiate a process within 30 days to
adjust current regulations. On November 8, 2017, the Treasury and Commerce Departments
issued amended regulations (effective November 9), and the State Department took
complementary action, to implement the new policy.121
Restrictions on Transactions with the Cuban Military. Pursuant to the NSPM, the State
Department was tasked with identifying entities controlled by the Cuban military, intelligence, or
security services or personnel and publishing a list of those entities with which direct financial
transactions would disproportionately benefit those services or personnel at the expense of the
Cuban people or private enterprise in Cuba.122 The NSPM specifically identified the Grupo de
Administración Empresarial S.A. (GAESA), a holding company of the Cuban military involved in
most sectors of the Cuban economy, particularly the tourism sector.123 The State Department
ultimately issued a list of 180 “restricted entities” that included 2 ministries, 5 holding companies
(including GAESA), 34 of their subentities (including the Mariel Special Development Zone), 84
hotels (27 in Havana), 2 tourist agencies, 5 marinas, 10 stores in Old Havana, and 38 entities
serving the defense and security sectors.124 Financial transactions with those entities are
prohibited by the Treasury Department, with certain exceptions, including transactions related to
air or sea operations supporting permissible travel, cargo, or trade; the sale of agricultural and
medical commodities; direct telecommunications or internet access for the Cuban people; and
authorized remittances.125 The new prohibitions limit U.S. economic engagement with Cuba,
particularly in travel-related transactions and potential investment opportunities.
Restrictions on People-to-People Travel. With regard to people-to-people travel, the
Department of the Treasury amended the CACR to require that people-to-people educational
travel take place under the auspices of an organization specializing in such travel, with travelers
120 White House, “Remarks by President Trump on the Policy of the United States Toward Cuba,” June 16, 2017, at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2017/06/16/remarks-president-trump-policy-united-states-towards-cuba;
and Department of State, “Strengthening the Policy of the United States Toward Cuba,” 82 Federal Register 48875-
48878, October 20, 2017 (consists of the text of National Security Presidential Memorandum, NSPM-5, issued by the
President on June 16, 2017).
121 U.S. Department of the Treasury, “Cuban Assets Control Regulations,” 82 Federal Register 51998-52004,
November 9, 2017; U.S. Department of Commerce, “Amendments to Implement United States Policy Toward Cuba,”
82 Federal Register, 51983-51986, November 9, 2017; and U.S. Department of State, “The State Department’s List of
Entities and Subentities Associated with Cuba (Cuba Restricted List),” 82 Federal Register 52089-52091, November 9,
2017.
122 U.S. Department of State, “State Department FAQs on the National Security Presidential Memorandum (NSPM) on
Cuba,” June 16, 2017, at https://www.state.gov/p/wha/ci/cu/rls/2017/271977.htm.
123 Nora Gámez Torres, “High on Cuba Policy Proposal: Restricting U.S. Business Deals with Cuba’s Military-Run
Entities,” Miami Herald, June 12, 2017.
124 U.S. Department of State, “Cuba Restricted List,” November 8, 2017, at https://www.state.gov/e/eb/tfs/spi/cuba/
cubarestrictedlist/index.htm.
125 U.S. Department of the Treasury, “Treasury, Commerce, and State Implement Changes to the Cuba Sanctions
Rules,” fact sheet, November 8, 2017 (effective November 9, 2017), at https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/
sanctions/Programs/Documents/cuba_fact_sheet_11082017.pdf.
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accompanied by a representative of the organization. Individuals are no longer authorized to
engage in such travel on their own. The Obama Administration had authorized such individual
travel in March 2016, which, combined with the beginning of regular commercial flights and
cruise ship service, led to an increase in Americans visiting Cuba. With the new Treasury
Department regulations issued, the level of U.S. travel to Cuba has fallen. (Also see “U.S. Travel
to Cuba,” below.)
Cuban Government Reaction. As expected, the Cuban government’s reaction to President
Trump’s June 2017 speech announcing Cuba policy changes was critical. Foreign Minister Bruno
Rodríguez asserted that the speech “was a grotesque spectacle straight from the Cold War.”126
Nevertheless, the Cuban government also reiterated its willingness to continue a respectful and
cooperative dialogue on issues of mutual interest and the negotiation of outstanding issues,
although it maintained that Cuba would not make concessions to its sovereignty and
independence.127
At a meeting of Cuba’s National Assembly in July 2017, then-Cuban President Raúl Castro
criticized the Trump Administration’s new policy toward Cuba as a setback to bilateral relations
and reaffirmed that any strategy with the goal of destroying the Cuban revolution would fail.
Nevertheless, Castro also reiterated that Cuba has the will to continue negotiating outstanding
bilateral issues with the United States. He maintained that “Cuba and the United States can
cooperate and live side by side, respecting differences and promoting all that can benefit both
countries and peoples,” but he also asserted that no one should expect Cuba to make concessions
inherent to its sovereignty and independence.128
Continued Focus on Human Rights
When President Trump announced his Cuba policy, he asserted that he was “canceling the last
administration’s policy change with Cuba,” which he labeled as “a terrible and misguided deal
with the Castro regime.” The President maintained that “the outcome of the last administration’s
executive action has been only more repression and a move to crush the peaceful democratic
movement.” Although the Cuban government’s human rights record remained poor after the
Obama Administration’s policy of engagement was initiated in December 2014, President Obama
continued to speak out strongly about human rights conditions in Cuba, including during his
March 2016 visit to Havana; the two countries subsequently engaged in a bilateral human rights
dialogue in October 2016.129
In his Miami speech, President Trump called for the Cuban government to end the abuse of
dissidents, release political prisoners, stop jailing innocent people, and return U.S. fugitives from
justice in Cuba, all issues that the Obama Administration had raised with the Cuban government.
The President stated that “any changes to the relationship between the United States and Cuba
will depend on real progress toward these and other goals.” Once Cuba takes concrete steps in
126 Francois Murphy, “Cuba Calls Trump Speech on Island ‘Grotesque Spectacle,’” Reuters News, June 19, 2017.
127 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba, “Statement by the Revolutionary Government of Cuba,” June 17, 2017, at
http://www.minrex.gob.cu/en/statement-revolutionary-government-cuba-0.
128 Raúl Castro Ruz, “Seguiremos avanzando en el camino escogido soberanamente por nuestro pueblo,” Cubadebate,
July 14, 2017, at http://www.cubadebate.cu/especiales/2017/07/14/raul-castro-seguiremos-avanzando-en-el-camino-
escogido-soberanamente-por-nuestro-pueblo/; and “Cuba’s Castro Rebuts Trump at National Assembly,” Reuters
News, July 14, 2017.
129 See U.S. Department of State, “Assistant Secretary Malinowski and Acting Assistant Secretary Aponte Travel to
Cuba,” October 13, 2016.
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these areas, President Trump said “we will be ready, willing and able to come to the table to
negotiate that much better deal for Cubans, for Americans.”130
The Trump Administration also cited concern about human rights for its November 1, 2017, vote
against the annual UNGA resolution condemning the U.S. embargo. In October 2016, under the
Obama Administration, the United States abstained for the first time on the resolution, but U.S.
officials also took the opportunity to express profound concerns about the Cuban government’s
Cuba’s poor human rights record. (For more on the U.N. votes, see “Cuba’s Foreign Relations”
above.)
In April 2018, then-Acting Secretary of State John Sullivan and USAID Administrator Mark
Green met with members of Cuba’s independent civil society on the margins of the Summit of the
Americas held in Peru. According to the State Department, Sullivan called “for democratic
reforms to Cuba’s flawed electoral process and an end to arbitrary detention and intimidation of
independent civil society.”131
Vice President Mike Pence spoke out on the human rights situation in Cuba during an address to
the OAS on May 7, 2018. Pence stated that “the longest-surviving dictatorship in the Western
Hemisphere still clings to power,” and that even though “the Castro name is now fading, the
oppression and police state they imposed is as powerful as ever.” He asserted, “Today, the United
States once again stands with the Cuban people in their stand for freedom.”132
The State Department has continued to call attention to the plight of political prisoners in Cuba.
In June 2018, the State Department reiterated the U.S. call for the release of all political prisoners
in Cuba and highlighted U.S. concern for two Cuban political prisoners declared “prisoners of
conscience” by Amnesty International—Dr. Eduardo Cardet and Dr. Ariel Ruiz Urquiola, who
was subsequently released in July 2018. In early October 2018, the State Department called for
the release of UNPACU activist Tomás Núñez Magdariaga, who had been on a hunger strike
since August; the Cuban government subsequently released him on October 15, 2018. A day later,
the U.S. Mission to the United Nations launched a campaign to call attention to Cuba’s
“estimated 130 political prisoners.” Cuban diplomats attempted to disrupt the event by making
noise, an action that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo dubbed “a childish tantrum.”133 (For more
details, see “Human Rights” section above.)
Internet Task Force. In January 2018, the State Department announced the establishment of a
Cuba Internet Task Force, composed of U.S. government and non-U.S. government
representatives, to examine the technological challenges and opportunities for expanding internet
access and independent media in Cuba.134 The task force was convened pursuant to President
Trump’s NSPM on Cuba and held its first meeting on February 7, 2018, with two subcommittees
formed to develop recommendations—one to explore the role of media and freedom of
information in Cuba and the other to explore internet access in Cuba.135 According to the State
130 White House, “Remarks by President Trump on the Policy of the United States Toward Cuba,” June 16, 2017.
131 U.S. Department of State, “Acting Secretary Sullivan’s Meeting with Cuban Independent Civil Society,” April 12,
2018.
132 White House, “Remarks by Vice President Pence During a Protocolary Meeting at the Organization of American
States,” May 7, 2018.
133 U.S. Department of State, “Remarks to the Press,” October 23, 2018.
134 U.S. Department of State, “Creation of the Cuba Internet Task Force,” January 23, 2018.
135 U.S. Department of State, “Inaugural Meeting of the Cuba Internet Task Force,” February 7, 2018.
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Department, the task force will review the subcommittees’ recommendations and prepare a final
report for the Secretary of State within a year.136
Cuban state media criticized the State Department’s establishment of the task force, maintaining
that the move “was aimed at subverting Cuba’s internal order.”137 Cuba’s foreign ministry issued
a note of diplomatic protest to the U.S. Embassy in Havana and called upon the U.S. government
to respect Cuba sovereignty.138
Continued Engagement in Some Areas
In a demonstration of continuity in U.S. policy between the Trump and Obama Administrations,
the U.S. and Cuban governments have continued to engage on various bilateral issues through
meetings and dialogues. The two countries have continued to hold semiannual migration talks,
which, since 1995, have provided a forum to review and coordinate efforts to ensure safe, legal,
and orderly migration between Cuba and the United States; talks were held in April and
December 2017, and most recently in July 2018.
The United States and Cuba also have continued to hold Bilateral Commission meetings that
began under the Obama Administration in which the two government review priorities and areas
for engagement. Officials held a sixth Bilateral Commission meeting in September 2017 and a
seventh meeting in June 2018. According to the State Department, at the June 2018 meeting, the
two countries reviewed such areas for engagement as trafficking in persons, civil aviation safety,
law enforcement matters, agriculture, maritime safety and search and rescue, certified claims, and
environmental challenges. The State Department maintained that the United States reiterated the
urgent need to identify the source of the “attacks” on U.S. diplomats and to ensure they cease,
expressed continued concerns about the arbitrary detention of independent journalists and human
rights defenders, and acknowledged Cuba’s progress in repatriating Cubans with final orders
while also emphasizing that Cuba needs to accept greater numbers of returnees.139 Cuba’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs maintained the meeting provided an opportunity to review areas of
exchange and cooperation, but it also criticized several aspects of U.S. policy, including the
“intensification” of the U.S. embargo and what Cuba viewed as the “political manipulation of the
alleged health cases” that became a “pretext” to reduce staff and therefore affect embassy
operations in both countries.140
Both countries also have continued engagement on other bilateral issues. The U.S. Coast Guard
and the Cuban Border Guard participated in professional exchanges in July 2017 and January
2018 covering a variety of topics, including search and rescue. The U.S. Departments of State,
Justice, and Homeland Security participated in law enforcement dialogues with Cuban
counterparts in September 2017 and July 2018; the 2018 dialogue included such topics as
fugitives and the return of Cuban nationals with final orders of removal. Additional bilateral
meetings and exchanges have been held in 2018 on such topics as cybersecurity and cybercrime,
counternarcotics efforts, and counterterrorism in January; anti-money laundering efforts and
136 House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, Hearing on U.S. Policy Toward
Cuba, “Testimony by Kenneth Merten, Principle Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, Bureau for Western Hemisphere
Affairs, and Ambassador Peter W. Bodde, Health Incidents Response Task Force,” September 6, 2018.
137 “Washington Creates Internet Task Force to Promote Subversion in Cuba,” Granma, January 24, 2018.
138 “Cuba Hands Note of Protest to U.S. Over Internet Task Force,” Reuters News, February 1, 2018.
139 U.S. Department of State, “United States and Cuba Hold Seventh Bilateral Commission Meeting,” June 14, 2018.
140 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba, “Seventh Meeting of the Cuba-United States Bilateral Commission Held in
Washington D.C.,” June 14, 2018.
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trafficking in persons in February; search and rescue in March; and agriculture and scientific
cooperation related to environmental disaster in April.141
U.S. Response to Injuries of U.S. Personnel in Havana142
On September 29, 2017, the U.S. Department of State ordered the departure of nonemergency
personnel assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Havana, as well as their families, to minimize the risk
of their exposure to harm because of a series of unexplained injuries suffered by embassy
personnel since November 2016.143 As a result, the embassy’s U.S. staffing level, which
numbered over 50, was reduced by about two-thirds. According to the State Department, the U.S.
government personnel suffered from “attacks of an unknown nature,” at U.S. diplomatic
residences and hotels where temporary duty staff were staying, with symptoms including “ear
complaints, hearing loss, dizziness, headache, fatigue, cognitive issues, and difficulty
sleeping.”144 U.S. officials maintain that they do not know the mechanism used to cause the health
injuries, the source, who is responsible, or the motive behind the alleged “attacks.”145
The State Department reports that 26 Americans have experienced health effects from the
incidents. Twenty-four of the incidents occurred from as early as November 2016 to August 2017.
In June 2018, two new cases stemming from occurrences in May 2018 were confirmed after
medical evaluations, bringing the total to 26 cases.146
On October 3, 2017, the State Department ordered the departure of 15 Cuban diplomats from the
Cuban Embassy in Washington, DC. According to then-Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, the
decision was made because of Cuba’s failure to protect U.S. diplomats in Havana and to ensure
equity in the impact on respective diplomatic operations.147 Previously, in May 2017, the State
Department had asked two Cuban diplomats to depart the United States because some U.S.
diplomats in Cuba had returned to the United States for medical reasons.148 State Department
officials maintain that the United States would need full assurances from the Cuban government
that the “attacks” will not continue before contemplating the return of diplomatic personnel.149
141 See U.S. Department of State, Releases Pertaining to Cuba, at https://www.state.gov/p/wha/ci/cu/rls/index.htm; and
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba, Embassy of Cuba in USA, at http://misiones.minrex.gob.cu/en/usa.
142 Cory R. Gill, Analyst in Foreign Affairs, contributed to this section.
143 U.S. Department of State, Remarks by Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson, “Actions Taken in Response to Attacks
on U.S. Government Personnel in Cuba,” September 29, 2017.
144 Ibid and U.S. Department of State, “Background Briefing: State Department Official on Cuba,” Special Briefing,
October 3, 2017; and Anne Gearan, “State Department Reports New Instance of American Diplomats Harmed in
Cuba,” Washington Post, September 1, 2017.
145 House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, Hearing on U.S. Policy Toward
Cuba, “Testimony by Kenneth Merten, Principle Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, Bureau of Western Hemisphere
Affairs, and Ambassador Peter W. Bodde, Health Incidents Response Task Force,” September 6, 2018, available at
http://docs.house.gov/meetings/FA/FA07/20180906/108652/HHRG-115-FA07-Wstate-MertenK-20180906.pdf.
146 U.S. Department of State, DipNote, “Department of State Revises Assessment of Personnel Affected in Cuba,”
October 20, 2017, at https://blogs.state.gov/stories/2017/10/20/en/week-state-october-20-2017; U.S. Department of
State, Press Briefing, June 21, 2018; U.S. Department of State, Heather Nauert, Spokesperson, Tweet, June 28, 2018;
and Mimi Whitefield, “Mystery Deepens in Havana as U.S. Confirms a 26th Diplomat in Cuba Suffered Health
Symptoms,” Miami Herald, June 28, 2018.
147 U.S. Department of State, Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson, “On the Expulsion of Cuban Officials from the
United States,” press statement, October 3, 2017.
148 U.S. Department of State, Department Press Briefing, August 9, 2017.
149 U.S. Department of State, “Background Briefing: State Department Official on Cuba,” Special Briefing, October 3,
2017.
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On March 5, 2018, the State Department began a permanent staffing plan at the U.S. Embassy in
Havana, operating it as an “unaccompanied post” without family members. The change took
place because the temporary “ordered departure” status for the embassy had reached its maximum
allowable days. According to the State Department, “the embassy will continue to operate with
the minimum personnel necessary to perform core diplomatic and consular functions, similar to
the level of emergency staffing maintained during ordered departure.”150
Although responsibility for injuries to U.S. personnel in Cuba is unknown, speculation by some
observers has focused on such possibilities as a rogue faction of Cuba’s security services or a
third country, such as Russia, with the apparent motivation of wanting to disrupt U.S.-Cuban
relations. Some maintain that Cuba’s strong security apparatus makes it unlikely that a third
country would be involved without the Cuban government’s acquiescence. Others stress that
there has been no evidence implicating a third country and that it would be highly unusual for a
rogue Cuban security faction to operate contrary to the interests of the Cuban government.151
Questions have revolved around what might cause such a variety of symptoms, including whether
a faulty surveillance device could be responsible for some of the incidents.152 Since the incidents
were first made public by the State Department in August 2017, numerous press reports have
referred to them as being caused by some type of sonic device.153 Yet some scientists and experts
in acoustics have cast doubt on this possibility, arguing that the laws of physics render it unlikely
that the use of ultrasound, which they see as the most plausible type of acoustic employed, could
be effectively used to harm personnel. They add that some of the reported symptoms individuals
have encountered would not have resulted from the use of such a device. Some point to other
possible scenarios, such as personnel coming into contact with toxins that damage hearing, or
even the spread of anxiety or other psychogenic contributors capable of triggering symptoms.
Some scientists assert that data regarding the potential effects of an ultrasound weapon on human
health is currently slim.154
An article in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), published February 15,
2018, reported that University of Pennsylvania physicians who evaluated individuals from the
U.S. Embassy community in Havana maintained that the individuals “appeared to have sustained
injury to widespread brain networks without an associated history of head trauma.” The study,
however, found no conclusive evidence of the cause of the brain injuries. An accompanying
editorial in JAMA cautioned about drawing conclusions from the study, noting that the
evaluations were conducted an average of 203 days after the onset of the symptoms and that it
was unclear whether individuals who developed symptoms were aware of earlier reports by
others.155 In August 2018, JAMA published several letters that raised additional questions
150 U.S. Department of State, “End of Ordered Departure at U.S. Embassy Havana,” March 2, 2018.
151 See for example, Gardiner Harris, Julie Hirschfeld Davis, and Ernesto Londoño, “U.S. Expels 15 Cuban Diplomats
from Embassy,” New York Times, October 4, 2017; and Tim Golden and Sebastian Rotella, ProPublica, February 14,
2018.
152 Glenn Garvin, “Is the New Cold War Between the U.S. and Cuba Based on Old Cold War Spycraft?” Miami
Herald, October 3, 2017.
153 For example, see Gardiner Harris, “16 Americans Sickened After Attack on Embassy Staff in Havana,” New York
Times, August 24, 2017; and Josh Lederman and Michael Weissenstein, “Dangerous Sound? What Americans Heard in
Cuba Attacks?” Associated Press, October 13, 2017.
154 Carl Zimmer, “A ‘Sonic Attack’ on Diplomats in Cuba? These Scientists Doubt It,” New York Times, October 5,
2017; and Hannah Devlin, “How Could the ‘Sonic Attack’ on US Diplomats in Cuba Have Been Carried Out?,” The
Guardian, August 25, 2017.
155 Randel L. Swanson II et al., “Neurological Manifestations Among US Government Personnel Reporting Directional
Audible and Sensory Phenomena in Havana, Cuba,” JAMA, February 15, 2018; Christopher C. Muth, MD and Steven
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concerning the February 2018 study, including one that asserted mass psychogenic illness could
not be discounted; the study’s authors, however, pushed back against the criticism, maintaining
that a complex constellation of neurological symptoms was consistent across the cohort that was
studied.156
A March 2018 University of Michigan report by three computer scientists concluded that the
sounds recorded in Cuba could have been caused by two eavesdropping devices placed in close
proximity to each other. The study concluded that the sounds could have been inadvertently
produced without malicious intent.157
The Canadian government announced on April 16, 2018, that it also was changing the designation
of its embassy in Havana as an “unaccompanied post,” meaning that diplomatic staff will not be
accompanied by their family members. Ten Canadians also reportedly experienced symptoms
such as headaches, dizziness, nausea, and difficulty concentrating, although there have been no
new cases since the early fall of 2017. Canadian medical specialists raised concerns about a
possible new type of acquired brain injury, the cause of which is unknown, but the Canadian
government maintains that there is no evidence to suggest that Canadian travelers to Cuba are at
risk.158
Accountability Review Board and Health Incidents Task Force
The State Department convened an Accountability Review Board (ARB) in January 2018 to
examine the circumstances regarding unexplained injuries in Cuba. The State Department
submitted a report to Congress on August 30, 2018, and at the same time released a fact sheet on
its website.159 The ARB’s mandate, according to the State Department, was not to determine the
cause of the incidents but rather to examine the State Department’s response and the adequacy of
security and other related procedures. The ARB found that the department’s security systems and
procedures were adequate and properly implemented overall but that there were significant
vacancies in security staffing and some challenges with information sharing and communication.
The ARB issued 30 recommendations to the State Department concerning accountability,
interagency coordination, medical issues, internal communication and information sharing,
risk/benefit analysis, and diplomatic security. The State Department maintains that it accepted all
of the recommendations and to date has implemented half.
In May 2018, the State Department announced that a U.S. government employee serving in
Guangzhou, China, experienced a health incident similar to that experienced by members of the
L. Lewis, MD, “Neurological Symptoms Among US Diplomats in Cuba,” editorial, JAMA, February 15, 2018; Karen
DeYoung, “Neurological Injuries Found in U.S. Staff in Cuba,” Washington Post, February 15, 2018; and Gina Kolata,
“Diplomats in Cuba Suffered Brain Injuries, Experts Still Don’t Know Why,” New York Times, February 16, 2018.
156 “Neurological Symptoms in US Government Personnel in Cuba,” JAMA, August 12, 2018. Also see Ian Sample,
“Cuban ‘Acoustic Attack’ Report on US Diplomats Flawed, Say Neurologists,” The Guardian, August 14, 2018.
157 Chen Yan, Kevin, Fu, and Wenyuan Xu, On Cuba, Diplomats, Ultrasound, and Intermodulation Distortion,
University of Michigan, Technical Report CSE-TR-001-18, March 1, 2018.
158 Government of Canada, “Statement by Global Affairs Canada on Ongoing Health and Security Situation of
Canadian Diplomatic Staff and Dependents in Havana,” April 16, 2018; and Catherine Cullen, “Canada Sending Home
Families of Diplomats in Cuba after Cases of “New Type” of Brain Injury,” CBC News, April 16, 2018.
159 U.S. Department of State, “Cuba Accountability Review Board,” fact sheet, August 30, 2018, at
https://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2018/08/285576.htm. In addition, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO)
issued a report in July 2018 examining the State Department’s response to the health incidents. See, GAO, Reported
Injuries to U.S. Personnel in Cuba, State Should Revise Policies to Ensure Appropriate Internal Communication of
Relevant Incidents, GA_-18-615, July 2018.
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U.S. diplomatic community in Havana. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo noted the incident in
testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on May 23.160 Subsequently, on June 5,
Pompeo announced the establishment of a multiagency Health Incidents Response Task Force to
serve as a coordinating body for State Department and interagency activities, including
identification and treatment of affected personnel and family members abroad, investigation and
risk mitigation, messaging, and diplomatic outreach.161
Vienna Convention
Under the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations and the 1963 Vienna Convention on
Consular Relations, nearly all countries worldwide participate in reciprocal obligations regarding
the diplomatic facilities of other countries in their territory.162 The United States and Cuba are
both party to these conventions. U.S. officials have repeatedly noted the Cuban government’s
obligations under the Vienna Convention to protect U.S. diplomats in Cuba.163
Under the 1961 convention, the safety of diplomatic agents (Article 29), the private residences of
diplomatic agents (Article 30), and the premises of diplomatic missions (Article 22) are protected,
with the receiving state under special duty to guarantee such protection. Similarly, under the 1963
convention (Article 40), the receiving state is responsible for treating consular officers with due
respect and taking “all appropriate steps to prevent any attack on their person, freedom or
dignity.”
Cuba’s Response
The Cuban government denies responsibility for the injuries of U.S. personnel, maintaining that it
would never allow its territory to be used for any action against accredited diplomats or their
families.164 In the aftermath of the order expelling its diplomats, Cuba’s Ministry of Foreign
Affairs issued a statement strongly protesting the U.S. action, asserting that it was motivated by
politics and arguing that ongoing investigations have reached no conclusion regarding the
incidents or the causes of the health problems.165 The statement noted that Cuba had permitted
U.S. investigators to visit Cuba and reiterated the government’s willingness to continue
cooperating on the issue.
At a November 2, 2017, press conference in Washington, DC, Cuban Foreign Minister Rodríguez
called for the U.S. government to “stop politicizing the issue,” maintaining that it could “take
bilateral relations further back” with “harmful consequences for both peoples and countries.”
Rodríguez reiterated that Cuban authorities “preliminarily concluded there is no evidence
whatsoever of the occurrence of the alleged incidents or the cause and the origin of these ailments
160 “House Foreign Affairs Committee Holds Hearing on the State Department’s Budget Operations and Policy
Priorities,” CQ Congressional Transcripts, May 23, 2018.
161 U.S. Department of State, “Establishment of the Health Incidents Response Task Force,” June 5, 2018.
162 United Nations, Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, 1961, Treaty Series, vol. 500, p. 95, and Vienna
Convention on Consular Relations, 1963, Treaty Series, vol. 596, p. 261.
163 U.S. Department of State, “Background Briefing: State Department Official on Cuba,” Special Briefing, October 3,
2017.
164 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba, “Statement by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba,” August 9, 2017, at
http://www.minrex.gob.cu/en/statement-ministry-foreign-affairs-cuba-1.
165 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba , “Declaration by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba,” October 10, 2017,
at http://www.minrex.gob.cu/en/declaration-ministry-foreign-affairs-cuba.
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reported by U.S. diplomats and their relatives.”166 The foreign minister also maintained that U.S.
cooperation on the investigation has been very limited and raised a series of questions regarding
the adequacy and timeliness of information provided to Cuban experts and medical personnel.
In September 2018, a delegation of Cuban scientists visited the United States to have meetings
with the State Department, the National Academy of Sciences, and on Capitol Hill. The director
of the Cuban Neuroscience Center, Dr. Mitchell Joseph Valdés-Sosa, maintains that there could be
various reasons why the diplomats became sick (such as hypertension, stress, other preexisting
conditions, and psychogenesis) but that Cuban scientists have not seen any credible evidence that
some type of high-tech weapon was used. The Cuban delegation expressed disappointment that
U.S. officials have not shared more medical and clinical data on the illnesses experienced by the
U.S. diplomats.167
Cuba Travel Advisory
The State Department issued a travel warning in September 2017, stating that due to the
drawdown in staff, the U.S. Embassy in Havana had limited ability to assist U.S. citizens in Cuba.
The warning advised U.S. citizens to avoid travel to Cuba because of the risk of being subject to
injury, since some of the incidents occurred at hotels frequented by U.S. citizens. In January
2018, the State Department revamped its travel advisory system to include four advisory levels:
Level 1, exercise normal precautions; Level 2, exercise increased caution; Level 3, reconsider
travel; and Level 4, do not travel. At the time, the advisory for Cuba was set at Level 3,
recommending that travelers should reconsider travel to Cuba but indicating that if the decision to
travel was made, travelers should avoid the Hotel Nacional and Hotel Capri, where some of the
injuries occurred.
On August 23, 2018, however, the State Department eased its travel advisory for Cuba to Level 2,
exercise increased caution, with a spokesman maintaining that the agency “undertook a thorough
review of the risks to private U.S. citizens in Cuba and decided a Level 2 travel advisory was
appropriate.”168 According to the advisory, travelers are still advised to avoid the Hotel Nacional
and the Hotel Capri and to immediately move to another area if they experience any acute
auditory or sensory phenomena. Travel agencies and organizations sponsoring travel to Cuba
lauded the State Department’s easing of the travel advisory. As noted above, U.S. travel to Cuba,
not including travel by the Cuban diaspora, reportedly fell by 24% during the first half of 2018.169
166 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba, “Press Conference by the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Cuba, Bruno
Rodríguez, National Press Club,” November 2, 2017, at http://misiones.minrex.gob.cu/en/articulo/press-conference-
minister-foreign-affairs-cuba-bruno-rodriguez-national-press-club-november.
167 Mimi Whitefield, “Cuban Scientists Visit U.S., Say, Yes, U.S. Diplomats Were Sick but there were No Attacks,”
Miami Herald, September 14, 2018; Gardiner Harris, “Cuban Experts Insist No Proof Exists of Attack on Diplomats,”
New York Times, September 14, 2018; and Katanga Johnson, “U.S., Cuba Officials Discuss Mysterious Embassy
Health Incidents,” Reuters News, September 13, 2018. Also see Republic of Cuba, Ministry of Foreign Affairs f Cuba,
“Executive Summary of the Assessment by the Cuban Scientific Panel of Medical Reports Regarding the Health of
U.S. Diplomats and Their Families Previously Stationed in Havana,” September 13, 2018, at
http://misiones.minrex.gob.cu/en/articulo/executive-summary-assessment-cuban-scientific-panel-medical-reports-
regarding-health-us.
168 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Consular Affairs, “Cuba Travel Advisory,” March 2, 2018, at
https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/traveladvisories/traveladvisories/cuba-travel-advisory.html; and Courtney
McBride, “U.S. Eases Security Warning for Travel to Cuba; Trump Administration’s Tougher Policy Remains in Place,
But Assessment of Dangers Reduced,” Wall Street Journal Online, August 23, 2018.
169 Mimi Whitefield and Nora Gámez Torres, “U.S. Softens Its Cuba Travel Advisory, Still Advises Caution,” Miami
Herald, August 23, 2018; and Christopher Reynolds, “Yes America, You Can Still Visit Cuba. And the Feds Have
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Effect of Staff Reduction on U.S. Embassy Havana Operations
The two-thirds staff reduction at the U.S. Embassy in Havana has had implications for bilateral
relations. Most visa processing at the U.S. Embassy in Havana has been suspended. Most Cubans
applying for nonimmigrant visas must go to a U.S. embassy or consulate in another country, and
applications and interviews for immigrant visas are currently being handled at the U.S. Embassy
in Georgetown, Guyana.
The suspension of nonimmigrant visa processing has made it more difficult and increased costs
for Cubans visiting family in the United States and for Cuban cuentapropistas (private sector
workers) traveling to the United States to bring back inputs for their businesses. The suspension
also has increased the costs for Cuban musicians, dancers, and other artists who now face a
decision whether to travel to a third country to apply for a nonimmigrant visa if they want to
perform in the United States; as a result, some have canceled tours in the United States.170 In
2013, the United States had begun granting multiple entry visas, good for five years, for Cubans
visiting the United States. As those visas expire, Cubans will need to travel to a third country to
request a new visa if they want to visit the United States.
In a 1994 bilateral migration accord with Cuba, the United States committed to issue 20,000
travel documents annually. It met that commitment in FY2017, but the embassy staff reduction
has negatively affected the United States’ ability to meet its commitment in FY2018. The State
Department acknowledged in April 2018 that it would not be able to issue 20,000 travel
documents for this fiscal year.171 In an October 2018 report to Congress, the State Department
noted that, as of the end of July 2018, the Department had issued 3,195 travel documents in the
categories specified under the migration accord.172
Since the staff reduction at the U.S. Embassy in Havana, information posted on the website of the
U.S. Embassy in Havana has stated that the State Department and the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) are determining arrangements for continuing to process applications under the
Cuban Family Reunification Parole Program (CFRP), a program administered by DHS’s U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).173 The CFRP was established in 2007 by USCIS
to help the United States meet its annual obligation under the 1994 U.S.-Cuba migration
accord.174 Staff reductions have led USCIS to suspend operations at its field office in Havana. In
past years, around 75% of the immigrant travel documents issued for Cuban nationals annually
were issued under the CFRP. In October 2017, State Department officials indicated that they
would work with DHS to ensure continued operation of the CFRP, but no plans have been
announced since then.175 Given that a majority of immigrant travel documents issued for Cubans
Softened Their Warnings,” Los Angeles Times, August 24, 2018.
170 For example, see Isabel Albee, “Cuba’s Cultural Sector Slammed by Partial Closure of U.S. Embassy,” Huffington
Post, November 2, 2017; and “Visa Difficulties Force Cuban Symphony to Cancel U.S. Tour,” Associated Press, April
4, 2018.
171 U.S. Department of State, “Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords, (October 2017 to March 2018),” report
to Congress, April 12, 2018.
172 U.S. Department of State, “Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords, (April 2018 to October 2018),” report to
Congress, October 4, 2018.
173 U.S. Embassy in Cuba, Visas, at https://cu.usembassy.gov/visas/
174 For background on the CFRP program, see USCIS, “The Cuban Family Reunification Parole Program,” at
https://www.uscis.gov/humanitarian/humanitarian-parole/cuban-family-reunification-parole-program
175 Nora Gámez Torres, “U.S. Will Maintain the Family Reunification Program for Cubans,” Miami Herald, October
12, 2017.
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are from the CFRP program, it could be difficult for the United States to reach the annual 20,000
target level without the CFRP program being reactivated and without USCIS reestablishing its
presence at the embassy.
The staff reduction at the U.S. Embassy in Havana also led to the closure of the Refugee Section
which had administered the U.S. Refugees Admission Program in Cuba. The embassy is not
accepting any new applications or processing refugee cases. The section was run by the State
Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration in conjunction with USCIS and the
Office of Refugee Resettlement of the Department of Health and Human Services. In FY2017, at
least 177 Cubans were admitted to the United States as refugees, whereas in FY2018, through
August 4, 2018, no Cubans were admitted as refugees.176
The embassy staff reduction likely also has made it more difficult to cover significant economic
and political developments in Cuba, including outreach to civil society and human rights activists.
The Political Section used to have several officers covering economic and political issues,
including human rights; due to the staff reduction, there is one U.S. official in the section.
Debate on the Direction of U.S. Policy
Over the years, although U.S. policymakers have agreed on the overall objectives of U.S. policy
toward Cuba—to help bring democracy and respect for human rights to the island—there have
been several schools of thought about how to achieve those objectives. Some have advocated a
policy of keeping maximum pressure on the Cuban government until reforms are enacted, while
continuing efforts to support the Cuban people. Others have argued for an approach, sometimes
referred to as constructive engagement, that would lift some U.S. sanctions that they believe are
hurting the Cuban people and would move toward engaging Cuba in dialogue. Still others have
called for a swift normalization of U.S.-Cuban relations by lifting the U.S. embargo. Legislative
initiatives introduced over the past decade have reflected these three policy approaches.
Dating back to 2000, there have been efforts in Congress to ease U.S. sanctions, with one or both
houses at times approving amendments to appropriations measures that would have eased U.S.
sanctions on Cuba. Until 2009, these provisions were stripped out of final enacted measures, in
part because of presidential veto threats. In 2009, Congress took action to ease some restrictions
on travel to Cuba, marking the first time that Congress had eased Cuba sanctions since the
approval of the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act of 2000 (P.L. 106-387,
Title IX). In light of Fidel Castro’s departure as head of government in 2006 and the gradual
economic changes made by Raúl Castro, some observers had called for a reexamination of U.S.
policy toward Cuba. In this new context, two broad policy approaches were advanced to contend
with change in Cuba: an approach that called for maintaining the U.S. dual-track policy of
isolating the Cuban government while providing support to the Cuban people and an approach
aimed at influencing the attitudes of the Cuban government and Cuban society through increased
contact and engagement.
The Obama Administration’s December 2014 change of U.S. policy from one of isolation to one
of engagement and movement toward the normalization of relations has highlighted divisions in
Congress over Cuba policy. Some Members of Congress lauded the Administration’s actions as in
the best interests of the United States and a better way to support change in Cuba, whereas other
Members strongly criticized the President for not obtaining concessions from Cuba to advance
176 The FY2017 number reflects statistics through September 1, 2017. See U.S. Department of State, “Cuban
Compliance with the Migration Accords, (March 2017 to September 2017),” report to Congress, October 18, 2017. For
FY2018, through August 4, 2018, see U.S. Department of State, “Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords,
(April 2018 to October 2018),” report to Congress, October 4, 2018.
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human rights. Some Members vowed to oppose the Administration’s efforts toward
normalization, whereas others have, as in the past, introduced legislation to normalize relations
with Cuba by lifting the embargo in its entirety or in part by easing some aspects of it.
The Trump Administration’s policy of rolling back some of the Obama-era changes also
highlights divisions in Congress over Cuba policy, with some Members supporting the
President’s action because of Cuba’s lack of progress on human rights and others opposing it
because of the potential negative effect on the Cuban people and U.S. business interests. Public
opinion polls show a majority of Americans support normalizing relations with Cuba, including a
majority of the Cuban American community in South Florida.177
In general, those who advocate easing U.S. sanctions on Cuba make several policy arguments.
They assert that if the United States moderated its policy toward Cuba—through increased travel,
trade, and dialogue—then the seeds of reform would be planted, which would stimulate forces for
peaceful change on the island. They stress the importance to the United States of avoiding violent
change in Cuba, with the prospect of a mass exodus to the United States. They argue that since
the demise of Cuba’s communist government does not appear imminent (despite more than 50
years of sanctions), the United States should espouse a more pragmatic approach in trying to
bring about change in Cuba. Supporters of changing policy also point to broad international
support for lifting the U.S. embargo, to the missed opportunities for U.S. businesses because of
the unilateral nature of the embargo, and to the increased suffering of the Cuban people because
of the embargo. In addition, proponents of change argue that the United States should be
consistent in its policies with the world’s few remaining communist governments, including
China and Vietnam.
On the other side, opponents of lifting U.S. sanctions maintain that the two-track policy of
isolating Cuba but reaching out to the Cuban people through measures of support is the best
means for realizing political change in Cuba. They point out that the LIBERTAD Act sets forth
the steps that Cuba must take for the United States to normalize relations. They argue that
softening U.S. policy without concrete Cuban reforms boosts Cuba’s communist regime,
politically and economically, and facilitates its survival. Opponents of softening U.S. policy argue
that the United States should stay the course in its commitment to democracy and human rights in
Cuba and that sustained sanctions can work. Critics of loosening U.S. sanctions further argue that
Cuba’s failed economic policies, not the U.S. embargo, are the causes of Cuba’s difficult living
conditions.
Selected Issues in U.S.-Cuban Relations
For many years, Congress has played an active role in U.S. policy toward Cuba through the
enactment of legislative initiatives and oversight on numerous issues. These issues include U.S.
economic sanctions on Cuba, such as restrictions on travel, remittances, and agricultural and
medical exports; terrorism issues, including Cuba’s designation as a state sponsor of international
terrorism; human rights issues, including funding and oversight of U.S.-government sponsored
democracy and human rights projects; funding and oversight for U.S.-government sponsored
177 See, for example, Pew Research Center, “Growing Public Support for U.S. Ties with Cuba – And an End to the
Trade Embargo,” July 21, 2015; Dalia Sussman, “Most Americans Support Ending the Embargo, Times Poll Finds,”
New York Times, March 21, 2016; and Florida International University, Cuba, 2016 FIU Cuba Poll, How Cuban
Americans in Miami View U.S. Policies Toward Cuba, September 2016, at https://cri.fiu.edu/events/2016/the-2016-fiu-
cuba-poll/cuba-poll-web.pdf.
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broadcasting to Cuba (Radio and TV Martí); migration issues; bilateral antidrug cooperation; and
U.S. claims for property confiscated by the Cuban government.
U.S. Travel to Cuba178
Restrictions on travel to Cuba have been a key and often contentious component of U.S. efforts to
isolate Cuba’s communist government for more than 50 years. Numerous changes to the
restrictions have occurred over time, and for five years, from 1977 until 1982, there were no
restrictions on travel. Restrictions on travel are part of the CACR, the embargo regulations
administered by the Department of the Treasury’s OFAC. Under the George W. Bush
Administration, enforcement of U.S. restrictions on Cuba travel increased and restrictions on
travel were tightened.
Under the Obama Administration, Congress took legislative action in March 2009 to ease
restrictions on family travel and on travel related to U.S. agricultural and medical sales to Cuba
(P.L. 111-8, Sections 620 and 621 of Division D). In April 2009, the Obama Administration went
further when the President announced that he was lifting all restrictions on family travel. In
January 2011, the Obama Administration made a series of changes further easing restrictions on
travel. The measures increased purposeful travel to Cuba related to religious, educational, and
journalistic activities, including people-to-people travel exchanges, and allowed U.S.
international airports to become eligible to provide services to licensed charter flights to and from
Cuba. In most respects, these new measures were similar to policies that were undertaken by the
Clinton Administration in 1999 but subsequently curtailed by the George W. Bush Administration
in 2003 and 2004.
As discussed above, President Obama announced a major shift in U.S. policy toward Cuba in
December 2014 that included an easing of U.S. restrictions on travel to Cuba. As part of the
change in policy, OFAC amended the CACR in 2015 to include general licenses for the 12
existing categories of travel to Cuba set forth in the regulations: (1) family visits; (2) official
business of the U.S. government, foreign governments, and certain intergovernmental
organizations; (3) journalistic activity; (4) professional research and professional meetings; (5)
educational activities, including people-to-people travel; (6) religious activities; (7) public
performances, clinics, workshops, athletic and other competitions, and exhibitions; (8) support for
the Cuban people; (9) humanitarian projects (now including microfinancing projects); (10)
activities of private foundations or research or educational institutes; (11) exportation,
importation, or transmission of information or information materials; and (12) certain export
transactions that may be considered for authorization under existing regulations and guidelines.
Before the policy change, travelers under several of these categories had to apply for a specific
license from the Department of the Treasury before traveling. Under the new regulations, both
travel agents and airlines are able to provide services for travel to Cuba without the need to obtain
a specific license. Authorized travelers no longer have a per diem limit for expenditures, as in the
past, and can bring back goods from Cuba as accompanied baggage for personal use, including
alcohol and tobacco.
Despite the easing of travel restrictions, travel to Cuba solely for tourist activities remains
prohibited. Section 910(b) of TSRA prohibits travel-related transaction for tourist activities,
which are defined as any activity not expressly authorized in the 12 categories of travel in the
CACR (31 C.F.R. 515.560).
178 For more information, see CRS Report RL31139, Cuba: U.S. Restrictions on Travel and Remittances, by Mark P.
Sullivan.
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In January 2016, the Department of the Treasury made additional changes to the travel
regulations. Among the changes, authorization for travel and other transactions for transmission
of informational materials now include professional media or artistic productions in Cuba
(movies, television, music recordings, and creation of artworks). Authorization for travel and
other transactions for professional meetings, public performances, clinics, workshops, athletic and
nonathletic competitions, and exhibitions now includes permission to organize these events, not
just participate in them.
The Department of the Treasury amended the travel regulations in March 2016 to permit travel to
Cuba for individual people-to-people educational travel, but as discussed above, President Trump,
as part of his partial rollback of engagement with Cuba, directed the Department of the Treasury
in June 2017 to eliminate the authorization for such travel for individuals. As set forth in amended
regulations issued on November 9, 2017, people-to-people educational travel is required to take
place under the auspices of an organization specializing in such travel, with travelers
accompanied by a representative of the organization.
U.S. Travelers to Cuba. According to Cuban government statistics, the number of U.S. travelers
increased from 91,254 in 2014 to 619,523 in 2017. This figure is in addition to thousands of
Cuban Americans who visit family in Cuba each year; in 2017, almost 454,000 Cubans living
outside the country visited Cuba, the majority from the United States.179
The number of U.S. visitors, however, reportedly began to slow in the latter half of 2017, in the
aftermath of Hurricane Irma, which struck in September, the Trump Administration’s tighter
restrictions on people-to-people travel, and the U.S. travel warning issued in September 2017
(until August 2018) related to the unexplained health injuries to U.S. diplomatic personnel in
Cuba (see discussion above on “Cuba Travel Advisory”). In the first half of 2018, the number of
U.S. visitors to Cuba, not including Cuban Americans, reportedly declined by 24% compared to
the same period in 2017.180
More recently, however, some people-to-people tour operators report that U.S. travel to Cuba is
picking up once again. One factor in the increase could be the August 2018 change in the U.S.
travel advisory for Cuba from Level 3 (reconsider travel) to Level 2 (exercise increased caution)
(see “Cuba Travel Advisory,” above). Some U.S. schools with academic exchange programs
reportedly do not allow travel to a country with a Level 3 advisory, so the easing of the advisory
to Level 2 will allow schools to once again include Cuba as part of their exchange programs.181
Regular Air Service. U.S. and Cuban officials signed a bilateral arrangement (in a memorandum
of understanding) in February 2016 permitting regularly scheduled air flights as opposed to
charter flights, which have operated between the two countries for many years.182 The
arrangement provided an opportunity for U.S. carriers to operate up to a total of 110 daily round-
trip flights between the United States and Cuba, including up to 20 daily round-trip flights to and
from Havana.183 In June 2016, the Department of Transportation announced that six U.S. airlines
179 República de Cuba, Oficina Nacional de Estadísticas e Información, Anuario Estadístico de Cuba 2016, Capítulo 15:
Turismo, Edición 2017; “Over One Million U.S. Citizens Visited Cuba in 2017,” Granma, January 9, 2018; and “Cuba
Tourism Slides in Wake of Hurricane Irma,” Reuters News, January 30, 2018.
180 Marc Frank, “U.S. Tourism to Cuba Revives after Months-Long Trump Slump-Sources,” Reuters News, July 17,
2018.
181 Mimi Whitefield, “U.S. Travel to Cuba Starts to Show Signs of Recovery,” Miami Herald, October 8, 2018.
182 U.S. Department of State, “U.S.-Cuba Technical Talks Yield Civil Aviation Arrangement,” media note, December
17, 2015.
183 U.S. Department of Transportation, “United States, Cuba Sign Arrangement Restoring Scheduled Air Service, DOT
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were authorized to provide air service for up to 90 daily flights between five U.S. cities (Miami,
Fort Lauderdale, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Minneapolis-St. Paul) and nine Cuban cities other
than Havana.184 JetBlue became the first U.S. airline to begin regularly scheduled flights in
August 2016. In August 2016, the Department of Transportation announced a final decision for
eight U.S. airlines to provide up to 20 regularly scheduled round-trip flights between Havana and
10 U.S. cities (Atlanta, Charlotte, Fort Lauderdale, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Newark, New
York [JFK], Orlando, and Tampa).185 American Airlines became the first airline to begin regular
direct flights to Havana from Miami in November 2016.
Four U.S. airlines that had been awarded flights to Cuba—Silver Airways, Frontier Airlines,
Spirit Airlines, and Alaska Airlines—have ended their air service to Cuba, citing competition
from other airlines and low demand. In March 2018, the Department of Transportation awarded
flights to Havana that had been given up (as well as a flight from Boston) to five U.S. airlines
already serving Cuba—American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue, Airways, Southwest Airlines,
and United Airlines.186 The U.S. air cargo company FedEx was supposed to begin operations to
Cuba in April 2017, but the company has requested three extensions to begin service, most
recently in June 2018 for a period of six months.187
In May 2016, the House Committee on Homeland Security, Subcommittee on Transportation
Security, held a hearing on potential security risks from the resumption of regularly scheduled
flights from Cuba. Some Members of Congress expressed concerns that Cuba’s airport security
equipment and practices were insufficient and that the Administration was rushing plans to
establish regular air service to Cuba; other Members viewed such concerns as a pretext to slow
down or block the Administration’s efforts to normalize relations with Cuba.188 Officials from the
Department of Homeland Security (including Customs and Border Protection and the
Transportation Security Administration) testified at the hearing regarding their work to facilitate
and ensure security of the increased volume of commercial air travelers from Cuba.189
Subsequently, in September 2016, the United States and Cuba finalized an aviation-security
agreement for the deployment of U.S. In-Flight Security Officers, more commonly known as
Federal Air Marshals, on board certain regularly scheduled flights to and from Cuba.190
Cruise Ship Service. The Carnival cruise ship company began direct cruises to Cuba from the
United States in May 2016 using smaller ships, accommodating about 700 passengers, under its
Launches Process to Award the New Flights,” February 16, 2016.
184 U.S. Department of Transportation, “U.S. Transportation Secretary Foxx Approves U.S. Airlines to Begin
Scheduled Service to Cuba,” June 10, 2016.
185 U.S. Department of Transportation, “U.S. Transportation Secretary Foxx Proposes U.S. Airlines and Cities for New
Scheduled Service to Havana,” July 7, 2016; and “Fact Sheet—DOT Issues Final Order for U.S.-Cuba Service to
Havana,” August 31, 2016.
186 U.S. Department of Transportation, “U.S. Department of Transportation Proposes New Scheduled Services to
Havana,” March 30, 2018.
187 Meagan Nichols, “FedEx Cites ‘Substantial Hurdles’ Delaying Flights to Cuba,” Memphis Business Journal Online,
November 7, 2017, and “FedEx Ask to Delay Service to Cuba, for Third Time,” Memphis Business Journal Online,
June 15, 2018.
188 Jacob Fischler, “Lawmakers Plan Bill to Stop Flights to Cuba over Security,” CQ Roll Call, July 12, 2016.
189 U.S. Committee on Homeland Security, Subcommittee on Transportation Security, “Flying Blind: What Are the
Security Risks of Resuming U.S. Commercial Air Service to Cuba?” Hearing, May 17, 2016, testimony available at
https://homeland.house.gov/hearing/flying-blind-security-risks-resuming-u-s-commercial-air-service-cuba/.
190 Nora Gámez Torres, “Cuba Approves U.S. Air Marshals on Commercial Flights,” El Nuevo Herald, September 30,
2016.
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cruise brand Fathom, which targeted people-to-people educational travel.191 The Fathom cruises
stopped in May 2017, but Carnival began using a larger ship for cruises to Cuba in June 2017.
Several other cruise ship companies—Royal Caribbean, Norwegian, Azamara Club Cruises,
Oceania Cruises, Regent Seven Seas Cruises, and Pearl Seas Cruises—began offering cruises to
Cuba from the United States in 2017. Under the embargo regulations, passengers on cruise ships
to Cuba must fall under one of the permissible categories of travel, which excludes tourist travel.
Since 2015, several companies also have been looking to establish ferry services between the
United States and Cuba. The services still require Cuban approval, and Cuban facilities need to be
developed to handle the services.
Pro/Con Arguments. Major arguments made for lifting the Cuba travel ban altogether are that
the ban abridges the rights of ordinary Americans to travel, hinders efforts to influence conditions
in Cuba, and may be aiding the Cuban government by helping restrict the flow of information. In
addition, supporters of lifting the ban point to the fact that Americans can travel to other countries
with communist or authoritarian governments. Major arguments in opposition to lifting the Cuba
travel ban are that more American travel would support the Cuban government with potentially
millions of dollars in hard currency; that legal provisions allowing travel to Cuba for
humanitarian purposes exist and are used by thousands of Americans each year; and that the
President should be free to restrict travel for foreign policy reasons.
Legislative Activity. To date in the 115th Congress, five bills have been introduced that would lift
remaining restrictions on travel. H.R. 351 (Sanford) would prohibit restrictions on travel to Cuba,
directly or indirectly, or any transactions incident to such travel. S. 1287 (Flake) would prohibit
the President for restricting travel to Cuba or any transactions incident to Cuba. H.R. 572
(Serrano) would facilitate the export of U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba and would lift travel
restrictions. H.R. 574 (Serrano), H.R. 2966 (Rush), and S. 1699 (Wyden) would lift the economic
embargo on Cuba and prohibit restrictions on travel.
On October 23, 2017, the House approved (by voice vote) H.R. 3328 (Katko), the Cuban Airport
Security Act of 2017. The bill would require a congressional briefing regarding certain security
measures and equipment at each of Cuba’s 10 international airports. The measure also would
prohibit a U.S. air carrier from employing a Cuban national in Cuba unless the carrier has
publicly disclosed the full text of the formal agreement between the air carrier and the Empresa
Cubana de Aeropuertos y Servicios Aeronauticos or any other entity associated with the Cuban
government. The bill would also, to the extent practicable, prohibit U.S. air carriers from hiring
Cuban nationals if they have been recruited, hired, or trained by entities that are owned, operated,
or controlled in whole or in part by Cuba’s Council of State, Council of Ministers, Communist
Party, Ministry of the Revolutionary Armed Forces, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, or Ministry of
the Interior. An identical bill, S. 2023 (Rubio), was introduced in the Senate on October 26, 2017.
In early October 2018, Congress completed action on the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018,
signed into law October 6, 2018, as P.L. 115-254 (H.R. 302), which includes a provision in
Section 1957 (similar, although not identical, to provision in H.R. 3328 noted above) requiring
the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to provide Congress a briefing on certain
aspects of security measures at airports in Cuba that have air service to the United States. The law
also requires the TSA Administrator (1) to direct all public charters to provide updated flight data
to more reliably track the public charter operations of air carriers between the United States and
Cuba and (2) to develop and implement a mechanism that corroborates and validates flight
191 Laura Stevens, “Carnival Gets U.S. Approval to Start Cruises to Cuba,” Dow Jones Newswires, July 7, 2015;
Shivani Vora, “Carnival Will Begin Cruises to Cuba in May,” New York Times, March 23, 2016.
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schedule data to more reliably track the public charter operations of air carries between the
United States and Cuba. This requirement relating to public air charters to and from Cuba stems
from a recommendation made by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in a July 2018
report examining TSA’s assessments of Cuban aviation security.192
U.S. Exports and Sanctions193
U.S. commercial medical exports to Cuba have been authorized since the early 1990s pursuant to
the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 (CDA), and commercial agricultural exports have been
authorized since 2001 pursuant to the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act of
2000 (TSRA), but with numerous restrictions and licensing requirements. For medical exports to
Cuba, the CDA requires on-site verification that the exported item is to be used for the purpose
for which it was intended and only for the use and benefit of the Cuban people. TSRA allows for
one-year export licenses for selling agricultural commodities to Cuba, although no U.S.
government assistance, foreign assistance, export assistance, credits, or credit guarantees are
available to finance such exports. TSRA also denies exporters access to U.S. private commercial
financing or credit; all transactions must be conducted in cash in advance or with financing from
third countries.
Cuba purchased almost $5.8 billion in U.S. products from 2001 to 2017, largely agricultural
products. For many of those years, the United States was Cuba’s largest supplier of agricultural
products. U.S. exports to Cuba rose from about $7 million in 2001 to a high of $712 million in
2008, far higher than in previous years. This increase was in part because of the rise in food
prices and because of Cuba’s increased food needs in the aftermath of several hurricanes and
tropical storms that severely damaged the country’s agricultural sector. U.S. exports to Cuba
declined considerably from 2009 through 2011, rose again in 2012, and fell every year through
2015, when U.S. exports amounted to just $180 million.194 (See Figure 3.)
Reversing that trend, however, U.S. exports to Cuba increased to $245 million in 2016 and $283
million in 2017. In 2017, U.S. exports to Cuba increased by 15% over the previous year. In the
first half of 2018, U.S. exports to Cuba amounted to $191 million, rising 19% over the same
period in 2017.
Looking at the composition of U.S. exports to Cuba from 2012 to 2017, the leading products were
poultry, soybean oilcake and other solid residue, soybeans, corn, and soybean oil. Poultry has
been the leading U.S. export to Cuba since 2012; in 2017, for example, it accounted for about
57% % of U.S. exports. Beyond agricultural products, other categories of products that have
increased over the past several years are parts for steam turbines, pesticides, pharmaceutical
products, and civilian aircraft, engines, and parts.
192 U.S. Government Accountability Office, Aviation Security, Actions Needed to Better Identify and Track U.S.-Bound
Public Charter Operations from Cuba, GAO-18-526, July 2018.
193 For additional information, see CRS Report R44119, U.S. Agricultural Trade with Cuba: Current Limitations and
Future Prospects, by Mark A. McMinimy.
194 Trade statistics in this section are from the U.S. Department of Commerce, as presented by Global Trade Atlas.
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Figure 3. U.S. Exports to Cuba, 2002-2017
Source: Created by CRS using Commerce Department statistics as presented by Global Trade Atlas.
President Obama’s policy changes, as set forth in regulatory changes made to the CACR and
EAR, included several measures designed to facilitate commercial exports to Cuba:
U.S. financial institutions are permitted to open correspondent accounts at Cuban
financial institutions to facilitate the processing of authorized transactions.
U.S. private export financing is permitted for all authorized export trade to Cuba,
except for agricultural goods exported pursuant to TSRA.
The definition of the term cash in advance for payment for U.S. exports to Cuba
was revised to specify that it means cash before transfer of title. In 2005, OFAC
had clarified that payment of cash in advance meant that the payment for the
goods had to be received prior to the shipment of the goods from the port at
which they were loaded in the United States. The regulatory change means that
payment can once again occur before an export shipment is offloaded in Cuba
rather than before the shipment leaves a U.S. port.
Commercial exports to Cuba of certain goods and services to empower Cuba’s
nascent private sector are authorized, including for certain building materials for
private residential construction, goods for use by private-sector Cuban
entrepreneurs, and agricultural equipment for small farmers.
Licenses for certain categories of exports are included under a “general policy of
approval.” These categories include exports for civil aviation and commercial
aircraft safety; telecommunications; U.S. news bureaus; human rights
organizations and nongovernmental organizations; environmental protection of
U.S. and international air quality, waters, and coastlines; and agricultural inputs
(such as insecticides, pesticides, and herbicides) that fall outside the scope of
those exports already allowed under TSRA.
Licenses for exports that will be considered on a case-by-case basis include
certain items exported to state-owned enterprises, agencies, and other
organizations of the Cuban government that provide goods and services for the
use and benefit of the Cuban people. These items include exports for agricultural
production, artistic endeavors, education, food processing, disaster preparedness,
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relief and response, public health and sanitation, residential construction and
renovation, public transportation, wholesale and retail distribution for domestic
consumption by the Cuban people, construction of facilities for treating public
water supplies, facilities for supplying electricity or other energy to the Cuban
people, sports and recreation facilities, and other infrastructure that directly
benefits the Cuban people. Note: The Trump Administration’s policy changes on
Cuba, as set forth by amended Commerce Department regulations issued in
November 2017, stipulate that export licenses for exports to state-owned
enterprises will generally be denied to export items for use by entities or
subentities on the State Department’s list of restricted entities associated with the
Cuban military, police, intelligence, or security services.
The commercial export of certain consumer communication devices, related
software, applications, hardware, and services, and items for the establishment
and update of communications-related systems is authorized; previously such
exports were limited to donations. The export of items for telecommunications,
including access to the internet, use of internet services, infrastructure creation,
and upgrades, also is authorized.
Companies exporting authorized goods to Cuba are authorized to have a physical
presence in Cuba, such as an office, retail outlet, or warehouse.
Persons subject to U.S. jurisdiction generally are authorized to enter into certain
contingent contracts for transactions currently prohibited by the embargo.
Certain consumer goods sold directly to eligible individuals in Cuba for their
personal use generally are authorized.
USDA Reports. In a June 2015 report, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) Foreign
Agricultural Service noted that “the U.S. share of the Cuban market has slipped dramatically,
from a high of 42% in FY2009 to only 16% in FY2014.” The report contended that the decline in
U.S. market share in Cuba “is largely attributable to a decrease in bulk commodity exports from
the United States in light of favorable credit terms offered by key competitors.” It maintained that
the United States had lost market share to those countries able to provide export credits to Cuba.
The report concluded that lifting U.S. restrictions on travel and capital flow to Cuba and enabling
USDA to conduct market development and credit guarantee programs in Cuba would help the
United States recapture its market share in Cuba.195
Another USDA report published in June 2015 by its Economic Research Service maintained that
a more normal economic relationship between the United States and Cuba would allow “U.S.
agricultural exports to develop commercial ties in Cuba that approximate their business
relationship in other parts of the world” (such as the Dominican Republic) and could “feature a
much larger level of U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba.” According to the report, increased U.S.
exports could include such commodities as milk, wheat, rice, and dried beans, as well as
intermediate and consumer-oriented commodities.196
U.S. International Trade Commission (USTIC) Reports. The USITC has issued three studies
since 2007 examining the effects of U.S. restrictions on trade with Cuba, with its most recent
195 U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Foreign Agricultural Service, International Agricultural Trade Report,
“U.S. Agricultural Exports to Cuba Have Substantial Room for Growth,” June 22, 2015, at http://www.fas.usda.gov/
data/us-agricultural-exports-cuba-have-substantial-room-growth.
196 USDA, Economic Research Service, “U.S.-Cuba Agricultural Trade: Past, Present, and Possible Future,” June 2015,
at https://www.ers.usda.gov/amber-waves/2015/august/us-cuba-agricultural-trade-past-present-and-possible-future/.
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report issued in April 2016.197 According to the findings of its 2016 report, U.S. restrictions on
trade and travel reportedly have shut U.S. suppliers out of a market in which they could be
competitive on price, quality, and proximity. The most problematic U.S. restrictions cited are the
inability to offer credit, travel to or invest in Cuba, and use funds sourced and administered by the
U.S. government. Cuban nontariff measures and other factors also may limit U.S. exports to and
investment in Cuba if U.S. restrictions are lifted, according to the report. These factors include
Cuban government control of trade and distribution, legal limits on foreign investment and
property ownership, and politically motivated decisionmaking regarding trade and investment.
Absent U.S. restrictions, U.S. exports in several sectors likely would increase somewhat in the
short term, with prospects for larger increases in the longer term, subject to changes in Cuban
policy and economic growth. U.S. exports could increase further if Cuban import barriers were
lowered. If U.S. restrictions were removed, U.S. agricultural and manufactured exports to Cuba
could increase to almost $1.8 billion annually; if both U.S. restrictions were removed and Cuban
barriers were lowered, U.S. exports could approach $2.2 billion annually.
Legislative Activity. To date in the 115th Congress, several bills have been introduced that would
lift or ease restrictions on U.S. exports to Cuba.
The Senate-passed version of the 2018 farm bill, H.R. 2, approved June 28, 2018,
has a provision, as amended by S.Amdt. 3364 (Rubio), that would permit funding
for certain U.S. export promotion programs (Market Access Program and Foreign
Market Development Cooperation Program) for U.S. agricultural products in
Cuba. As stipulated, the funds could not be used in contravention with directives
set forth under the National Security Presidential Memorandum issued by
President Trump in June 2017 that prohibits transactions with entities owned,
controlled, or operated by or on behalf of military, intelligence, or security
services of Cuba. The provision originated from a Heitkamp amendment to the
original Senate version of the farm bill, S. 3042, approved during markup of the
bill by the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
H.R. 442 (Emmer)/S. 472 (Moran) would repeal or amend various provisions of
law restricting trade with Cuba, including certain restrictions in the CDA, the
LIBERTAD Act, and TSRA. The bills would repeal restrictions on private
financing for Cuba in TSRA but would continue to prohibit U.S. government
support for foreign assistance or financial assistance, loans, loan guarantees,
extension of credit, or other financing for export to Cuba, albeit with presidential
waiver authority for national security or humanitarian reasons. The federal
government would be prohibited from expending any funds to promote trade
with or develop markets in Cuba, although certain federal commodity promotion
programs would be allowed.
H.R. 525 (Crawford) would permit U.S. government assistance for U.S.
agricultural exports to Cuba as long as the recipient of the assistance is not
controlled by the Cuban government; authorize the private financing by U.S.
entities of sales of agricultural commodities; and authorize investment for the
development of an agricultural business in Cuba as long as the business is not
197 U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC), U.S. Agricultural Sales to Cuba: Certain Economic Effects of U.S.
Restrictions, USITC Publication 3932, July 2007, at http://www.usitc.gov/publications/332/pub3932.pdf; USITC, U.S.
Agricultural Sales to Cuba: Certain Economic Effects of U.S. Restrictions, An Update, Office of Industries Working
Paper, by Jonathan R. Coleman, No. ID-22, June 2009, at http://www.usitc.gov/publications/332/ID-22.pdf; and
USITC, “Overview of Cuban Imports of Goods and Services and Effects of U.S. Restrictions,” March 2016,
Publication 4597, released April 18, 2016, at http://www.usitc.gov/publications/332/pub4597.pdf.
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controlled by the Cuban government and does not traffic in property of U.S.
nationals confiscated by the Cuban government.
S. 275 (Heitkamp) would amend TSRA to allow for the private financing by U.S.
entities of agricultural commodities to Cuba.
H.R. 572 (Serrano), among its various provisions, has the goal of facilitating the
export of U.S. agricultural and medical exports to Cuba by permanently
redefining the term payment of cash in advance to mean that payment is received
before the transfer of title and release and control of the commodity to the
purchaser; authorizing direct transfers between Cuban and U.S. financial
institutions for products exported under the terms of TSRA; establishing an
export-promotion program for U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba; and repealing
the on-site verification requirement for medical exports to Cuba under the CDA.
H.R. 574 (Serrano), H.R. 2966 (Rush), and S. 1699 (Wyden) would lift the
overall economic embargo on Cuba, including restrictions on exports to Cuba in
the CDA and TSRA.
S. 1286 (Klobuchar) would repeal or amend various provisions of law restricting
trade with Cuba, including certain restrictions in the CDA, the LIBERTAD Act,
and TSRA.
Trademark Sanction
For more than 15 years, the United States has imposed a trademark sanction specifically related to
Cuba. A provision in the FY1999 omnibus appropriations measure (§211 of Division A, Title II,
P.L. 105-277, signed into law October 21, 1998) prevents the United States from accepting
payment from Cuban nationals for trademark registrations and renewals that were used in
connection with a business or assets in Cuba that were confiscated, unless the original owner of
the trademark has consented. U.S. officials maintain that the sanction prohibits a general license
under the CACR for transactions or payments for such trademarks.198 The provision also prohibits
U.S. courts from recognizing such trademarks without the consent of the original owner.
The measure was enacted because of a dispute between the French spirits company Pernod Ricard
and the Bermuda-based Bacardi Limited. Pernod Ricard entered into a joint venture in 1993 with
Cubaexport, a Cuban state company, to produce and export Havana Club rum. Bacardi maintains
that it holds the rights to the Havana Club name because in 1995 it entered into an agreement for
the Havana Club trademark with the Arechabala family, who had originally produced the rum
until its assets and property were confiscated by the Cuban government in 1960. The Arechabala
family had let the trademark registration lapse in the United States in 1973, and Cubaexport
successfully registered it in 1976. Although Pernod Ricard cannot market Havana Club in the
United States because of the trade embargo, it wants to protect its future distribution rights should
the embargo be lifted.199
198 As noted previously, a general license provides the authority to engage in a transaction without the need to apply to
the Department of the Treasury for a license while a specific license is a written document issued by the Department of
the Treasury to a person or entity authorizing a particular transaction in response to a written license application. See
testimony of Mary Boney Denison, Commission for Trademarks, U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, in U.S. Congress,
House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet, Resolving Issues with
Confiscated Property in Cuba, Havana Club Rum and Other Property, hearing, 114th Cong., 2nd sess., February 11,
2016.
199 For additional background, see David Montgomery, “Havana Club v. Havana Club: Inside the Rum War Between
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The European Union initiated World Trade Organization (WTO) dispute settlement proceedings
in June 2000, maintaining that the U.S. law violates the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS). In January 2002, the WTO ultimately found that the
trademark sanction violated WTO provisions on national treatment and most-favored-nation
obligations in the TRIPS agreement. In March 2002, the United States agreed that it would come
into compliance with the WTO ruling through legislative action by January 2003.200 That deadline
was extended several times because no legislative action had been taken to bring Section 211 into
compliance with the WTO ruling. In July 2005, however, in an EU-U.S. understanding, the EU
agreed that it would not request authorization to retaliate at that time, but reserved the right to do
so at a future date, and the United States agreed not to block a future EU request.
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) did not process Cubaexport’s 10-year renewal of
the Havana Club trademark when it was due in 2006 because the Department of the Treasury’s
OFAC denied the company the specific license that it needed to pay the fee for renewing the
trademark registration.201 In providing foreign policy guidance to OFAC at the time, the State
Department recommended denial of the license, maintaining that doing so would be consistent
with “the U.S. approach toward non-recognition of trademark rights associated with confiscated
property” and consistent with U.S. policy to deny resources to the Cuban government to hasten a
transition to democracy.202
Almost a decade later, in January 2016, OFAC issued a specific license to Cubaexport, allowing
the company to pay fees to the USPTO for the renewal of the Havana Club trademark registration
for the 2006-2016 period. Subsequently, in February 2016, USPTO renewed the trademark
registration for 10 additional years, until 2026.
OFAC had requested foreign policy guidance from the State Department in November 2015 for
Cubaexport’s request for a specific license. According to the State Department, in evaluating the
case, it took into account the “landmark shift” in U.S. policy toward Cuba, U.S. foreign policy
with respect to its key allies in Europe, and U.S. policy with regard to trademark rights associated
with confiscated property. State Department and USPTO officials maintain that the renewal of the
Havana Club trademark registration does not resolve the trademark dispute. The State
Department notes that federal court proceedings are pending in which Bacardi has filed suit
against Cubaexport to contest the Havana Club trademark ownership in the United States and that
OFAC’s issuance of a license permitting USPTO to renew the trademark registration will allow
the two parties to proceed toward adjudication of the case.203
Legislative Activity. In Congress, two different approaches have been advocated for a number of
years to bring Section 211 into compliance with the WTO ruling. Some Members want a narrow
fix in which Section 211 would be amended so that it applies to all persons claiming rights in
trademarks confiscated by Cuba, whatever their nationality, instead of being limited to designated
nationals, meaning Cuban nationals. Advocates of this approach argue that it would treat all
Bacardi and Cuba,” Washington Post, July 24, 2016.
200 “U.S., EU Agree on Deadline for Complying with Section 211 WTO Finding,” Inside U.S. Trade, April 12, 2002.
201 “PTO Cancels Cuban ‘Havana Club’ Mark; Bacardi Set to Sell Rum Under Same Mark,” International Trade Daily,
August 10, 2006.
202 U.S. Department of State, Unclassified Memorandum (to OFAC from Economic Bureau, Department of State)
Subject: Ropes & Gray LLP (Havana Club) Licensing Case, July 28, 2006.
203 U.S. Department of State, Testimony of Kurt Tong, Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs, in U.S. Congress,
House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet, Resolving Issues with
Confiscated Property in Cuba, Havana Club Rum and Other Property, hearing, 114th Cong., 2nd sess., February 11,
2016.
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holders of U.S. trademarks equally. Other Members want Section 211 repealed altogether. They
argue that the law endangers more than 5,000 trademarks of more than 400 U.S. companies
registered in Cuba.204 The House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual
Property, and the Internet held a hearing in February 2016 on the trademark issue and on the issue
of confiscated property, but this did not lead to any legislative action.205
In the 115th Congress, S. 259 (Nelson)/H.R. 1450 (Issa) would apply the narrow fix so that the
trademark sanction applies to all nationals, whereas four broader bills on Cuba sanctions, H.R.
572 (Serrano), H.R. 574 (Serrano), H.R. 2966 (Rush), and S. 1699 (Wyden), have provisions that
would repeal Section 211.
Two FY2018 House appropriations bills, H.R. 3267 (Commerce) and H.R. 3280 (Financial
Services), had provisions that would have introduced new sanctions related to Cuba and
trademarks, but neither of these were included in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L.
115-141). H.R. 3267 had a provision that would have prohibited funds to approve the registration
or renewal, or the maintenance of the registration, of a mark, trade name, or commercial name
used in connection with a business or assets that were confiscated by the Cuban government
unless the original owner has expressly consented. H.R. 3280 had a provision that would have
prohibited funding to approve or otherwise allow the licensing (general or specific) of a mark,
trade name, or commercial name used in connection with a business or assets that were
confiscated by the Cuban government unless the original owner has expressly consented. These
provisions had also been included in the House-passed version of a FY2018 omnibus
appropriations measure, H.R. 3354, approved in September 2017.
Likewise for FY2019, two House Appropriations bill, H.R. 5952 (Commerce) and H.R.
6258/H.R. 6147 (Financial Services), have provisions related to Cuba and trademarks similar to
those that had been included in House bills for FY2018. H.R. 5952 has a provision that would
prohibit funds in the act from being used to approve the registration, renewal, or maintenance of
the registration of a mark, trade name, or commercial name that was confiscated in Cuba unless
the original owner has expressly consented. H.R. 6258/H.R. 6147 have a provision that would
provide that no funds made available by the act could be used to authorize a general license or
approve a specific license with respect to a mark, trade name, or commercial name that is
substantially similar to one that was used in connection with a business or assets that were
confiscated by the Cuban government unless the original owner expressly consented.
Democracy and Human Rights Funding
Since 1996, the United States has provided assistance—through the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID), the State Department, and the National Endowment for Democracy
(NED)—to increase the flow of information on democracy, human rights, and free enterprise to
Cuba. USAID and State Department efforts are funded largely through Economic Support Funds
(ESF) in the annual foreign operations appropriations bill. From FY1996 to FY2018, Congress
appropriated some $344 million in funding for Cuba democracy efforts.206 In recent years, this
204 Statement of William A. Reinsch, National Foreign Trade Council, House Committee on the Judiciary,
Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet, Resolving Issues with Confiscated Property in Cuba,
Havana Club Rum and Other Property, hearing, 114th Cong., 2nd sess., February 11, 2016.
205 U.S. Congress, House Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet,
Resolving Issues with Confiscated Property in Cuba, Havana Club Rum and Other Property, hearing, 114th Cong., 2nd
sess., February 11, 2016, Serial No. 114-62 (Washington: GPO, 2016).
206 The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports that Congress appropriated $205 million for Cuba
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funding included $20 million in each fiscal year from FY2014 through FY2018. For FY2018,
however, the Trump Administration, as part of its attempt to cut foreign assistance levels, did not
request any democracy and human rights assistance funding for Cuba, but Congress ultimately
provided $20 million. For FY2019, the Trump Administration requested $10 million to provide
democracy and civil society assistance for Cuba.
Although USAID received the majority of this funding for many years, the State Department
began to receive a portion of the funding in FY2004 and in recent years has been allocated more
funding than USAID. The State Department generally has transferred a portion of the Cuba
assistance that it administers to NED.
USAID’s Cuba program has supported a variety of U.S.-based nongovernmental organizations
with the goals of promoting a rapid, peaceful transition to democracy, helping to develop civil
society, and building solidarity with Cuba’s human rights activists.207
NED is not a U.S. government agency but an independent nongovernmental organization that
receives U.S. government funding. Its Cuba program is funded by the organization’s regular
appropriations by Congress as well as by funding from the State Department. Until FY2008,
NED’s democratization assistance for Cuba had been funded largely through the annual
Commerce, Justice, and State appropriations measure, but it is now funded through the State
Department, Foreign Operations and Related Programs appropriations measure. According to
information provided by NED on its website, its Cuba funding from FY2014 through FY2017
amounted to $15.9 million.208
FY2017 Appropriations. For FY2017, the Obama Administration had requested $15 million in
ESF for Cuba democracy and human rights programs, a 25% reduction from FY2016. According
to the request, the assistance would support civil society initiatives that promote democracy,
human rights, and fundamental freedoms, particularly freedoms of expression and association.
The programs would “provide humanitarian assistance to victims of political repression and their
families, strengthen independent civil society, support the Cuban people’s desire to freely
determine their future, reduce their dependence on the Cuban state, and promote the flow of
uncensored information to, from and within the island.”209
In the 114th Congress, the House version of the FY2017 State Department, Foreign Operations,
and Related Programs appropriations bill, H.R. 5912 (H.Rept. 114-693), reported July 15, 2016,
would have provided $30 million for democracy promotion in Cuba, double the Administration’s
request. The bill also would have prohibited funding for business promotion, economic reform,
entrepreneurship, or any other assistance that was not democracy building authorized by the
LIBERTAD Act of 1996. In contrast, the Senate version of the FY2017 foreign operations
appropriations bill, S. 3117 (S.Rept. 114-290), reported June 29, 2016, would have recommended
fully funding the Administration’s request of $15 million. However, it also would have provided
that $3 million be made available for USAID to support free enterprise and private business
organizations and people-to-people educational and cultural activities.
democracy programs from FY1996 through FY2011. See U.S. GAO, Cuba Democracy Assistance, USAID’s Program
Is Improved, But State Could Better Monitor Its Implementing Partners, GAO-13-285, January 2013.
207 U.S. Agency for International Development, “Cuba,” at https://www.usaid.gov/cuba.
208 See the grants database of the National Endowment for Democracy at https://www.ned.org/wp-content/themes/ned/
search/grant-search.php.
209 U.S. Department of State, Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2017, Appendix
3, February 26, 2016, p. 406.
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Because the 114th Congress did not complete action on FY2017 appropriations, the 115th
Congress took final action in early May 2017 through enactment of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2017 (P.L. 115-31). The explanatory statement to the measure provided $20
million in democracy assistance for Cuba, $5 million more than requested, and did not include
any of the directives noted above in the House and Senate appropriations bills in the 114th
Congress.
FY2018 Appropriations. For FY2018 appropriations, given the strong congressional record of
appropriating such aid for many years, some Members of Congress strongly opposed the Trump
Administration’s proposal to cut all democracy and human rights funding for Cuba. The House
Appropriations Committee’s version of the FY2018 State Department and Foreign Operations
appropriations bill, H.R. 3362 (H.Rept. 115-253), would have provided $30 million in democracy
assistance for Cuba but would have prohibited the obligation of funds for business promotion,
economic reform, entrepreneurship, or any other assistance that is not democracy-building as
expressly authorized in the LIBERTAD Act of 1996 and the CDA of 1992. These provisions were
included in the House-passed version of the FY2018 omnibus appropriations measure, H.R. 3354,
approved in September 2017.
The Senate Appropriations Committee’s version of the FY2018 State Department and Foreign
Operations appropriations bill, S. 1780 (S.Rept. 115-152), would have provided $15 million for
democracy programs in Cuba, with not less than $3 million to support free enterprise and private
business organizations in Cuba and people-to-people educational and cultural activities.
In final action in March 2018, Congress provided $20 million for democracy programs in Cuba in
the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141; explanatory statement, Division K)
without any of the directives in the House and Senate appropriations bills and reports noted
above.
FY2019 Appropriations. For FY2019, the Trump Administration requested $10 million for
democracy and civil society assistance in support of the Administration’s Cuba policy. The House
Appropriations Committee’s State Department and Foreign Operations appropriations bill, H.R.
6385, would provide $30 million to promote democracy and strengthen civil society in Cuba,
with, according to the draft report to the bill, not less than $8 million for the National Endowment
for Democracy; the draft report would prohibit the obligation of funds for business promotion,
economic reform, entrepreneurship, or any other assistance that is not democracy-building and
stipulate that grants exceeding $1 million or to be implemented over a period of 12 months would
be awarded only to organizations with experience promoting democracy inside Cuba. The Senate
Appropriations version of the bill, S. 3108, would provide $15 million for democracy programs in
Cuba.
Oversight of U.S. Democracy Assistance to Cuba. The GAO has issued three major reports
since 2006 examining USAID and State Department democracy programs for Cuba.210 In the
most recent report, issued in 2013, GAO concluded that USAID had improved its performance
and financial monitoring of implementing partners’ use of program funds, but found that the State
210 A 2006 GAO report examined Cuba democracy programs from 1996 through 2005 and concluded that the U.S.
program had significant problems and needed better management and oversight. See GAO, U.S. Democracy Assistance
for Cuba Needs Better Management and Oversight, GAO-07-147, November 2006. A 2008 GAO report lauded the
steps that the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) had taken since 2006 to address problems with its
Cuba program and improve oversight of the assistance, but also maintained that USAID had not staffed the program to
the level needed for effective grant oversight. See GAO, Foreign Assistance: Continued Efforts Needed to Strengthen
USAID’s Oversight of U.S. Democracy Assistance for Cuba, GAO-09-165, November 2008.
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Department’s financial monitoring had gaps. Both agencies were reported to be taking steps to
improve financial monitoring.211
In 2014, two investigative news reports alleged significant problems with U.S. democracy
promotion efforts in Cuba. In April, an Associated Press (AP) investigative report alleged that
USAID, as part of its democracy promotion efforts for Cuba, had established a “Cuban Twitter”
known as ZunZuneo, a communications network designed as a “covert” program “to undermine”
Cuba’s communist government built with “secret shell companies” and financed through foreign
banks. According to the press report, the project, which was used by thousands of Cubans, lasted
more than two years until it ended in 2012.212 USAID, which strongly contested the report, issued
a fact sheet about the ZunZuneo program. It maintained that program was not “covert” but rather
that, just as in other places where USAID is not always welcome, the agency maintained a
“discreet profile” on the project to minimize risk to staff and partners and to work safely.213 Some
Members of Congress strongly criticized USAID for not providing sufficient information to
Congress about the program when funding was appropriated, whereas other Members staunchly
defended the agency and the program.
In August 2014, the AP reported on another U.S.-funded democracy program for Cuba in which a
USAID contractor sent about a dozen youth from several Latin American countries (Costa Rica,
Peru, and Venezuela) in 2010 and 2011 to Cuba to participate in civic programs, including an
HIV-prevention workshop, with the alleged goal to “identify potential social-change actors” in
Cuba. The AP report alleged that “the assignment was to recruit young Cubans to anti-
government activism under the guise of civic programs.”214 USAID responded in a statement
maintaining that the AP report “made sensational claims against aid workers for supporting civil
society programs and striving to give voice to these democratic aspirations.”215
In December 2015, USAID’s Office of Inspector General issued a report on USAID’s Cuban
Civil Society Support Program that examined both the ZunZuneo and HIV-prevention projects.
The report cited a number of problems with USAID’s management controls of the civil society
program and made a number of recommendations, including that USAID conduct an agency-wide
analysis to determine whether a screening policy is needed to address intelligence and subversion
threats and, if so, develop and implement one.216
211 GAO, Cuba Democracy Assistance, USAID’s Program Is Improved, But State Could Better Monitor Its
Implementing Partners, GAO-13-285, January 2013.
212 Desmond Butler, Jack Gillum, and Alberto Arce, “U.S. Secretly Created ‘Cuban Twitter’ to Stir Unrest,” Associated
Press, April 3, 2014.
213 USAID, “Statement in Reference to the Associated Press Article on ‘Cuba Twitter’ on April 3, 2014,” press
statement, April 3, 2014; “Eight Facts About ZunZuneo,” April 7, 2014, at http://blog.usaid.gov/2014/04/eight-facts-
about-zunzuneo/.
214 Desmond Butler et al., “The Big Story, U.S. Sent Latin Youth Undercover in Anti-Cuba Ploy,” Associated Press,
August 4, 2014.
215 USAID, “Statement from USAID Spokesperson Matt Herrick on Cuba Civil Society Story,” August 4, 2014.
216 USAID, Office of Inspector General, Review of USAID’s Cuban Civil Society Support Program,” December 22,
2015, at https://oig.usaid.gov/node/1936.
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Radio and TV Martí217
U.S.-government-sponsored radio and television broadcasting to Cuba—Radio and TV Martí—
began in 1985 and 1990, respectively.218 Until October 1999, U.S.-government-funded
international broadcasting programs had been a primary function of the United States Information
Agency (USIA). When USIA was abolished and its functions were merged into the Department of
State at the beginning of FY2000, the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG) became an
independent agency that included such entities as the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio
Liberty, Radio Free Asia, and the Office of Cuba Broadcasting (OCB).
Today, OCB, which has been headquartered in Miami, FL, since 1998, manages Radio and TV
Martí and the Martínoticias.com website and its social media platforms on YouTube, Google, and
Facebook.219 According to the BBG’s 2019 Congressional Budget Justification, the Martís reach
11.1% of Cubans on a weekly basis with audio, video, and digital content delivered by radio,
satellite TV, online, and on distinctly Cuban digital “packages” (paquetes).220 The largest
audiences reportedly are for Radio Martí and TV Martí, with weekly audiences respectively
reaching 8% and 6.8% of Cubans, while online content reaches a smaller audience of 5.3%. OCB
also administers a shortwave transmitting station in Greenville, NC. Additional newer
transmitters at Greenville reportedly have helped increase Radio Martí’s presence in Cuba, and
the increase in the number of frequencies has made it harder for the Cuban government to
interfere with the radio broadcasts.221
Funding. From FY1984 through FY2018, Congress appropriated about $882 million for
broadcasting to Cuba. In recent years, funding has amounted to some $27-$29 million in each
fiscal year from FY2014 to FY2018. The Trump Administration’s FY2019 request is for almost
$13.7 million.
For FY2017, the Obama Administration requested $27.1 million for the OCB, about the same
amount appropriated in FY2016. The Administration also requested authority for the BBG to
establish a new Spanish-language, nonfederal media organization that would receive a BBG grant
and perform the functions of the current OCB.222 The House version of the FY2017 State
Department, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs appropriations bill, H.R. 5912 (H.Rept.
114-693), had a provision that would have blocked the Administration’s request by prohibiting
funding to establish an independent grantee organization to carry out any and all broadcasting and
related programs to the Latin American and Caribbean region or otherwise substantially alter the
structure of the OCB unless specifically authorized by a subsequent act of Congress. The funding
prohibition pertained to the merger of the OCB and the Voice of America Latin America Division.
The Senate version of the bill, S. 3117 (S.Rept. 114-290), would have provided $27.4 million for
217 For background on U.S. international broadcasting, including Radio and TV Martí, see CRS Report R43521, U.S.
International Broadcasting: Background and Issues for Reform, by Matthew C. Weed.
218 The Radio Broadcasting to Cuba Act (P.L. 98-111) was signed into law in October 1983, and the Television
Broadcasting to Cuba Act (P.L. 101-246, Title II, Part D) was signed into law in February 1990.
219 Available at https://www.martinoticias.com/.
220 See Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG), 2019 Congressional Budget Justification, February 21, 2018, at
https://www.bbg.gov/wp-content/media/2018/02/BBGBudget_FY19_CBJ_2-7-18_Final.pdf. For information on
additional methods that have been utilized to deliver Martí programming to Cuba, see Nora Gámez Torres, “Radio and
TV Martí Sneaked in Same Forbidden Technology that Landed Alan Gross in Cuban Jail,” Miami Herald, March 20,
2018.
221 BBG, 2019 Congressional Budget Justification, February 21, 2018, p. 30.
222 BBG, Executive Summary in Fiscal Year 2017 Congressional Budget Request, February 9, 2016.
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the OCB, $300,000 more than the Administration’s request. The report to the bill stated that the
committee did not support the proposed contractor reduction of $300,000 at the OCB.
The 115th Congress completed final action on FY2017 appropriations in early May 2017 through
enactment of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017 (P.L. 115-31). The explanatory statement
to the measure provided $28.056 million for the Office of Cuba Broadcasting, $1 million more
than requested. According to the BBG, the actual amount provided for the OCB in FY2017 was
$28.938 million.
For FY2018, the Trump Administration requested $23.656 million for the OCB, $4.4 million less
than the amount Congress appropriated for FY2017. According to the BBG’s request, the funding
reduction would be covered by a reduction in contractor support, elimination of most vacant staff
positions and reduction of other government positions through attrition, elimination of ineffective
leased broadcast transmissions, and a reduction of administrative costs.223 The report to the House
Appropriations Committee’s version of the FY2018 State Department and Foreign Operations
appropriations bill (H.Rept. 115-253 to H.R. 3362) would have provided $28.1 million for
broadcasting to Cuba, $4.4 million above the request; this also was included in the House-passed
version of the FY2018 omnibus appropriations measure, H.R. 3354, approved in September 2017.
The Senate Appropriations Committee’s version of the FY2018 State Department and Foreign
Operations appropriations bill, S. 1780 (S.Rept. 115-152), would have provided not less than
$28.6 million for broadcasting to Cuba. In final action Congress provided $28.936 million for
Cuba broadcasting, $5.28 million more than requested, in the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2018 (P.L. 115-141; explanatory statement, Division K), signed into law in March 2018.
For FY2019, the Trump Administration is requesting $13.656 million for the OCB, $10 less than
the Administration’s FY2018 request and $15.3 million less than the amount provided in FY2017.
The rationale for the proposed cut in funding for the OCB is to find efficiencies between OCB
and the Voice of America’s Latin American division.224 The House Appropriations Committee’s
draft FY2019 State Department and Foreign Operations bill, H.R. 6385, would provide $29.1
million for Cuba broadcasting, while the Senate Appropriations Committee’s bill, S. 3108, would
provide $29.2 million. The report to the Senate bill, S.Rept. 115-282, would also call for a State
Department Cuba report on Internet access, the use of cell phones to access data, the impact of
access to telecommunications technology on increased political and economic opportunities, and
the impact of telecommunications development on human rights.
Migration Issues225
In its final days in office, the Obama Administration announced another major Cuba policy shift.
On January 12, 2017, the United States ended the so-called “wet foot/dry foot” policy under
which thousands of undocumented Cuban migrants entered the United States in recent years.
(Under that policy, those Cuban migrants interdicted at sea generally were returned to Cuba
whereas those reaching U.S. land were allowed entrance into the United States and generally
permitted to stay.) Under the new policy, as announced by President Obama and then-Secretary of
Homeland Security Jeh Johnson, Cuban nationals who attempt to enter the United States illegally
223 Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG), Fiscal Year 2018 Congressional Budget Request, May 23, 2017.
224 Broadcasting Board of Governors, 2019 Congressional Budget Justification, February 12, 2018.
225 For more information, see CRS Report R44714, U.S. Policy on Cuban Migrants: In Brief, by Andorra Bruno.
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and do not qualify for humanitarian relief are now subject to removal. The Cuban government
also agreed to begin accepting the return of Cuban migrants who have been ordered removed.226
At the same time, the Obama Administration announced that it was ending the special Cuban
Medical Professional Parole program, a 10-year-old program allowing Cuban medical
professionals in third countries to be approved for entry into the United States.227
Background. Cuba and the United States reached two migration accords in 1994 and 1995
designed to stem the mass exodus of Cubans attempting to reach the United States by boat. On
the minds of U.S. policymakers was the 1980 Mariel boatlift, in which 125,000 Cubans fled to the
United States with the approval of Cuban officials. In response to Fidel Castro’s threat to unleash
another Mariel, U.S. officials reiterated U.S. resolve not to allow another exodus. Amid escalating
numbers of fleeing Cubans, on August 19, 1994, President Clinton abruptly changed U.S.
immigration policy, under which Cubans attempting to flee their homeland were allowed into the
United States, and announced that the U.S. Coast Guard and Navy would take Cubans rescued at
sea to the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Despite the change in policy, Cubans
continued to flee in large numbers.
As a result, in early September 1994, Cuba and the United States began talks that culminated in a
September 9, 1994, bilateral agreement to stem the flow of Cubans fleeing to the United States by
boat. In the agreement, the United States and Cuba agreed to facilitate safe, legal, and orderly
Cuban migration to the United States, consistent with a 1984 migration agreement. The United
States agreed to ensure that total legal Cuban migration to the United States would be a minimum
of 20,000 each year, not including immediate relatives of U.S. citizens. (For information on the
effect of the staff reduction at the U.S. Embassy in Havana on visa processing, see “Effect of
Staff Reduction on U.S. Embassy Havana Operations” above.)
In May 1995, the United States reached another accord with Cuba under which the United States
would parole the more than 30,000 Cubans housed at Guantanamo into the United States but
would intercept future Cuban migrants attempting to enter the United States by sea and would
return them to Cuba. The two countries would cooperate jointly in the effort. Both countries also
pledged to ensure that no action would be taken against those migrants returned to Cuba as a
consequence of their attempt to immigrate illegally. In January 1996, the Department of Defense
announced that the last of some 32,000 Cubans intercepted at sea and housed at Guantanamo had
left the U.S. naval station, most having been paroled into the United States.
Maritime Interdictions. Since the 1995 migration accord, the U.S. Coast Guard has interdicted
thousands of Cubans at sea and returned them to their country. Until early January 2017, those
Cubans who reached the U.S. shore were allowed to apply for permanent resident status in one
year, pursuant to the Cuban Adjustment Act of 1966 (P.L. 89-732). In short, most interdictions,
even in U.S. coastal waters, resulted in a return to Cuba, whereas those Cubans who touched
shore were allowed to stay in the United States. Some had criticized this so-called wet foot/dry
foot policy as encouraging Cubans to risk their lives to make it to the United States and as
226 White House, “Statement by the President on Cuban Immigration Policy,” January 12, 2017; U.S. Department of
Homeland Security, “Statement by Secretary Johnson on the Continued Normalization of our Migration Relationship
with Cuba,” January 12, 2017; U.S Department of Homeland Security, “Fact Sheet: Changes to Parole and Expedited
Removal Policies Affecting Cuban Nationals,” January 12, 2017.
227 A White House official indicated in January 2016 that the Administration was considering ending the Medical
Professional Parole program. At that time, more than 7,000 Cuban medical personnel working in third countries had
been approved to be paroled into the United States under the program, which began in 2006. See Jeff Mason and
Daniel Trotta, “U.S. Considers Ending Program That Lures Cuban Doctors to Defect,” Reuters, January 8, 2016. For
information from the Department of Homeland Security on the termination of the program, see https://www.uscis.gov/
humanitarian/humanitarian-parole/cuban-medical-professional-parole-cmpp-program.
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encouraging alien smuggling. Cuba had long opposed the policy, which it viewed as encouraging
illegal, unsafe, and disorderly migration, alien smuggling, and Cubans’ irregular entry into the
United States from third countries.
Over the years, the number of Cubans interdicted at sea by the U.S. Coast Guard has fluctuated
annually, influenced by several factors, including the economic situations in Cuba and the United
States. The number of interdictions rose from 666 in FY2002 to 2,868 in FY2007 (see Figure 4).
In the three subsequent years, maritime interdictions declined significantly to 422 by FY2010.
Major reasons for the decline were reported to include the U.S. economic downturn, more
efficient coastal patrolling, and more aggressive prosecution of migrant smugglers by both the
United States and Cuba.228 From FY2011 through FY2016, however, the number of Cubans
interdicted by the Coast Guard increased each year, from 1,047 in FY2011 to 5,230 in FY2016.
The increase in the flow of maritime migrants in 2015 and 2016 was driven by concerns among
Cubans that the favorable treatment granted to Cuban migrants would end.
Figure 4. Maritime Interdictions of Cubans by the U.S. Coast Guard
(FY2002-FY2017)
Source: Created by CRS using information provided to CRS by the U.S. Coast Guard, July 2018.
With the change in U.S. immigration policy toward Cuba in January 2017, the number of Cubans
interdicted by the Coast Guard dropped to a trickle. For FY2017, the Coast Guard interdicted
2,109 Cubans, with the majority of these interdictions occurring before the policy change. For
FY2018, as of August 14, 2018, the Coast Guard interdicted 200 Cubans at sea.229
Arrival of Undocumented Cuban Migrants. According to statistics from the Department of
Homeland Security, the number of undocumented Cubans entering the United States both at U.S.
ports of entry and between ports of entry rose from almost 8,170 in FY2010 to 58,269 in FY2016
(see Table 1). Beginning around FY2013, according to the State Department, undocumented
228 Alfonso Chardy and Juan Tamayo, “Exodus of Cubans Slowing,” Miami Herald, October 6, 2010. U.S. Department
of State, “Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords (April 2012 to October 2012),” report to Congress, October
22, 2012.
229 U.S. Department of State, “Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords, (April 2018 to October 2018),” report to
Congress, October 4, 2018.
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Cuban migrants began to favor land-based routes to enter the United States, especially via ports
of entry from Mexico. Since that time and the change in U.S. immigration policy in early 2017,
the number of undocumented Cubans entering by land increased significantly, with a majority
entering through the southwestern border.230
Table 1. Undocumented Cuban Migrants, FY2010-FY2018
(via U.S. ports of entry and between ports of entry)
Between Ports of
Ports of Entry
Entry
Total
FY2010
7,458
712
8,170
FY2011
7,786
959
8,745
FY2012
12,048
606
12,654
FY2013
17,360
624
17,984
FY2014
23,751
1,061
24,812
FY2015
40,119
1,153
41,272
FY2016
56,340
1,929
58,269
FY2017
20,254
701
20,955
FY2018
6,044
173
6,217
(as of 8/21/18)
Sources: U.S. Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Office of Congressional
Affairs, April 10, 2017; and U.S. Department of State, Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords, reports to
Congress, October 18, 2017, April 12, 2018, and October 4, 2018.
Just as the number of Cubans interdicted by the U.S. Coast Guard at sea has dropped
precipitously since the change in U.S. immigration policy toward Cuba, the number of
undocumented Cuban migrants entering the United States at ports of entry and between ports of
entry has fallen considerably. In FY2017, 20,955 undocumented Cubans entered the United States
at and between ports of entry, with the majority of these, almost 18,000, entering before the
change in U.S. immigration policy. In FY2018, as of August 21, 2018, 6,044 undocumented
Cubans arrived in the United States at or between ports of entry, about a 70% decline from all of
FY2017.231
Antidrug Cooperation
Cuba is not a major producer or consumer of illicit drugs, but its extensive shoreline and
geographic location make it susceptible to narcotics-smuggling operations. Drugs that enter the
Cuban market are largely the result of onshore wash-ups from smuggling by high-speed boats
230 U.S. Department of State, “Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords,” reports to Congress, May 7, 2014;
November 6, 2014; April 30, 2015; November 3, 2015; April 29, 2016; and October 21, 2016. In 2015 and 2016,
Central American governments voiced concerns about the large number of Cuban migrants transiting their countries on
their way to the United States and resultant humanitarian challenges. Nicaragua closed its border to Cuban migrants
from Costa Rica in November 2015, leading to thousands of Cubans being stranded in Costa Rica and in Panama until
an airlift was established allowing them to bypass Nicaragua.
231 U.S. Department of State, “Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords (March 2017 to September 2017),”
report to Congress, October 18, 2017, “Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords (October 2017 to March
2018),” report to Congress, April 12, 2018, and “Cuban Compliance with the Migration Accords (April 2018 to
October 2018),” October 4, 2018.
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moving drugs from Jamaica to the Bahamas, Haiti, and the United States or by small aircraft from
clandestine airfields in Jamaica. For a number of years, Cuban officials have expressed concerns
about the use of their waters and airspace for drug transit and about increased domestic drug use.
The Cuban government has taken a number of measures to deal with the drug problem, including
legislation to stiffen penalties for traffickers, increased training for counternarcotics personnel,
and cooperation with a number of countries on antidrug efforts. Since 1999, Cuba’s Operation
Hatchet has focused on maritime and air interdiction and the recovery of narcotics washed up on
Cuban shores. Since 2003, Cuba has aggressively pursued an internal enforcement and
investigation program against its incipient drug market with an effective nationwide drug
prevention and awareness campaign.
Over the years, there have been varying levels of U.S.-Cuban cooperation on antidrug efforts. In
1996, Cuban authorities cooperated with the United States in the seizure of 6.6 tons of cocaine
aboard the Miami-bound Limerick, a Honduran-flag ship. Cuba turned over the cocaine to the
United States and cooperated fully in the investigation and subsequent prosecution of two
defendants in the case in the United States. Cooperation has increased since 1999, when U.S. and
Cuban officials met in Havana to discuss ways of improving antidrug cooperation. Cuba accepted
an upgrading of the communications link between the Cuban Border Guard and the U.S. Coast
Guard as well as the stationing of a U.S. Coast Guard drug interdiction specialist at the U.S.
Interests Section in Havana. The Coast Guard official was posted to the U.S. Interests Section in
September 2000.
Since the reestablishment of diplomatic relations with Cuba in 2015, U.S. antidrug cooperation
has increased further, with several dialogues and exchanges on counternarcotics issues. In
December 2015, U.S. and Cuban officials held talks at the headquarters of the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) in Washington, DC, with delegations discussing ways to stop the illegal
flow of narcotics and exploring ways to cooperate on the issue.232 In April 2016, Cuban security
officials toured the U.S. Joint Interagency Task Force South (JIATF-South) based in Key West,
FL. JIATF-South has responsibility for detecting and monitoring illicit drug trafficking in the
region and for facilitating international and interagency interdiction efforts. At a July 2016
dialogue in Havana with U.S. officials from the State Department, DEA, the U.S. Coast Guard,
and Immigration and Customs Enforcement/Homeland Security Investigations, Cuba and the
United States signed a counternarcotics arrangement to facilitate cooperation and information
sharing.233 Technical exchanges between the U.S. Coast Guard and Cuba’s Border Guard on
antidrug efforts and other areas of cooperation occur periodically, including most recently in
January 2018.
According to the State Department’s 2018 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report
(INCSR), issued in March 2018, Cuba has 40 bilateral agreements for antidrug cooperation with
countries worldwide, including the 2016 U.S.-Cuban agreement noted above.234 The report also
stated that Cuban authorities and the U.S. Coast Guard share tactical information related to
vessels transiting through Cuban territorial waters suspected of trafficking and coordinate
responses. In addition, as noted in the report, direct communications were established in July
2016 between the U.S. DEA and Cuban counterparts within the Ministry of Interior’s National
Anti-Drug Directorate. Since then, according to the INCSR, the DEA has received approximately
232 U.S. Department of State, “United States and Cuba Hold Counter-Narcotics Dialogue,” media note, December 2,
2015.
233 U.S. Department of State, “Counternarcotics Arrangement Signed During Third Counternarcotics Technical
Exchange Between the United States and Cuba,” media note, July 22, 2016.
234 U.S. Department of State, International Narcotics Control Strategy Report 2018, Volume I: Drug and Chemical
Control, March 2018.
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20 requests for information related to drug investigations in addition to cooperation leading to
Cuba’s arrest of a fugitive wanted in the United States. More broadly, the INCR reports that Cuba
has provided assistance to U.S. state and federal prosecutions by providing evidence and
information, and has demonstrated a willingness to cooperate on law enforcement matters.
As in the past, the State Department contended in the 2018 INCSR that “enhanced
communication and cooperation between the United States, international partners, and Cuba,
particularly in terms of real-time information-sharing, would likely lead to increased interdictions
and disruptions of illegal drug trafficking.” As noted in the INCSR, Cuba reported maritime
seizures of 2.72 metric tons (MT) of illicit drugs in 2016 (2.5 MT of marijuana and 225 kilograms
of cocaine). This compares to 906 kilograms of maritime seizures in 2015.
U.S. Property Claims
An issue in the process of normalizing relations is Cuba’s compensation for the expropriation of
thousands of properties of U.S. companies and citizens in Cuba. The Foreign Claim Settlement
Commission (FCSC), an independent agency within the Department of Justice, has certified
5,913 claims for expropriated U.S. properties in Cuba valued at $1.9 billion in two different
claims programs; with accrued interest, the properties’ value would be some $8 billion. In 1972,
the FCSC certified 5,911 claims of U.S. citizens and companies that had their property
confiscated by the Cuban government through April 1967, with 30 U.S. companies accounting for
almost 60% of the claims.235 In 2006, the FCSC certified two additional claims in a second claims
program covering property confiscated after April 1967. Many of the companies that originally
filed claims have been bought and sold numerous times. There are a variety of potential
alternatives for restitution or compensation schemes to resolve the outstanding claims, but
resolving the issue likely would entail considerable negotiation and cooperation between the two
governments.236
Although Cuba has maintained that it would negotiate compensation for the U.S. claims, it does
not recognize the FCSC valuation of the claims or accrued interest. Instead, Cuba has emphasized
using declared taxable value as an appraisal basis for expropriated U.S. properties, which would
amount to almost $1 billion, instead of the $1.9 billion certified by the FCSC.237 Moreover, Cuba
generally has maintained that any negotiation should consider losses that Cuba has accrued from
U.S. economic sanctions. Cuba estimates cumulative damages of the U.S. embargo at $121
billion in current prices.238
Several provisions in U.S. law specifically address the issue of compensation for properties
expropriated by the Cuban government.239 Section 620(a)(2) of the Foreign Assistance Act of
235 “A Road Map for Restructuring Future U.S. Relations with Cuba,” policy paper, Atlantic Council, June 1995,
Appendix D.
236 Matías F. Travieso-Díaz, “Alternative Recommendations for Dealing with Expropriated U.S. Property in Post-
Castro Cuba,” in Cuba in Transition, Volume 12, Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy, 2002.
237 Timothy Ashby, “U.S. Certified Claims Against Cuba: Legal Reality and Likely Settlement Mechanisms,” Inter-
American Law Review, March 2009.
238 Michelle Nichols, “Cuba’s Castro Slams U.S. Trade Embargo at United Nations,” Reuters News, September 26,
2015; Republic of Cuba, Ministry of Foreign Relations, “On Resolution 69/5 of the United Nations General Assembly
Entitled ‘Necessity of Ending the Economic, Commercial and Financial Blockade Imposed by the United States of
America Against Cuba,’” June 2015.
239 Other non-Cuba-specific provisions of law relating to the expropriation of properties of U.S. citizens include Section
620(e) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, which requires the President to suspend assistance to the government of
any country that has expropriated property owned by U.S. citizens, and Section 12 of the International Development
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1961 prohibits foreign assistance, a sugar quota authorizing the importation of Cuban sugar into
the United States, or any other benefit under U.S. law until the President determines that the
Cuban government has taken appropriate steps to return properties expropriated by the Cuban
government to U.S. citizens and entities not less than 50% owned by U.S. citizens, or to provide
equitable compensation for the properties. The provision, however, authorizes the President to
waive its restrictions if he deems it necessary in the interest of the United States.
The LIBERTAD Act includes the property claims issue as one of the many factors that the
President needs to consider in determining when a transition government is in power in Cuba and
when a democratically elected government is in power. These determinations are linked,
respectively, to the suspension and termination of the economic embargo on Cuba. For a
transition government, as set forth in Section 205(b)(2) of the law, the President shall take into
account the extent to which the government has made public commitments and is making
demonstrable progress in taking steps to return property taken by the Cuban government on or
after January 1, 1959, to U.S. citizens (and entities that are 50% or more beneficially owned by
U.S. citizens) or to provide equitable compensation for such property. A democratically elected
government, as set forth in Section 206 of the law, is one that, among other conditions, has made
demonstrable progress in returning such property or providing full compensation for such
property, in accordance with international law standards and practice.
Section 103 of the LIBERTAD Act also prohibits a U.S. person or entity from financing any
transaction that involves confiscated property in Cuba where the claim is owned by a U.S.
national. The sanction may be suspended once the President makes a determination that a
transition government is in power and shall be terminated when the President makes a
determination that a democratically elected government is in power.
In the 114th Congress, two House hearings focused on the property claims issue. The House
Western Hemisphere Subcommittee of the Committee on Foreign Affairs held a hearing in June
2015, and the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and
the Internet held a hearing in February 2016.240
Since the reestablishment of diplomatic relations with Cuba in 2015, U.S. and Cuban officials
have held three meetings on claims issues. The first meeting took place in December 2015 in
Havana, with talks including discussions of the FCSC-certified claims of U.S. nationals, claims
related to unsatisfied U.S. court judgments against Cuba (reportedly 10 U.S. state and federal
judgments totaling about $2 billion), and some claims of the U.S. government. The Cuban
delegation raised the issue of claims against the United States related to the U.S. embargo.241 A
second claims meeting was held in July 2016, in Washington, DC. According to the State
Association Act and Section 21 of the Inter-American Development Bank Act, which require the President to instruct
U.S. executive directors to oppose loans to any state that has nationalized, expropriated, or seized property owned by a
U.S. citizen. For additional information, see CRS Report R43888, Cuba Sanctions: Legislative Restrictions Limiting
the Normalization of Relations, by Dianne E. Rennack and Mark P. Sullivan.
240 House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, The Future of Property Rights in
Cuba, hearing, 114th Cong., 1st sess., June 18, 2015, at http://foreignaffairs.house.gov/hearing/subcommittee-hearing-
future-property-rights-cuba; and House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the
Internet, Resolving Issues with Confiscated Property in Cuba, Havana Club Rum and Other Property, hearing, 114th
Cong., 2nd sess., February 11, 2016, at https://judiciary.house.gov/hearing/resolving-issues-with-confiscated-property-
in-cuba-havana-club-rum-and-other-property-2/.
241 U.S. Department of State, “United States and Cuba Hold Claims Talks in Havana,” media note, December 7, 2015;
Frances Robles, “Competing Claims in Havana,” New York Times, December 14, 2015.
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Department, the talks allowed for an exchange of views on historical claims-settlement practices
and processes going forward.242 A third claims meeting was held in Havana in January 2017.
U.S. Fugitives from Justice
An issue that had been mentioned for many years in the State Department’s annual terrorism
report was Cuba’s harboring of fugitives wanted in the United States. The most recent mention of
the issue was in the 2014 terrorism report (issued in April 2015), which stated that Cuba “does
continue to harbor fugitives wanted to stand trial or to serve sentences in the United States for
committing serious violations of U.S. criminal laws, and provides some of these individuals
limited support, such as housing, food ration books, and medical care.”243 With the resumption of
diplomatic relations with Cuba, the United States have held several law enforcement dialogues in
that reportedly included the issue of fugitives from justice.
U.S. fugitives from justice in Cuba include convicted murderers and numerous hijackers, most of
whom entered Cuba in the 1970s and early 1980s.244 For example, Joanne Chesimard, also known
as Assata Shakur, was added to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI’s) Most Wanted
Terrorist list in May 2013. Chesimard was part of militant group known as the Black Liberation
Army. In 1977, she was convicted for the 1973 murder of a New Jersey State Police officer and
sentenced to life in prison. Chesimard escaped from prison in 1979 and, according to the FBI,
lived underground before fleeing to Cuba in 1984.245 Another fugitive, William “Guillermo”
Morales, who was a member of the Puerto Rican militant group known as the Armed Forces of
National Liberation, reportedly has been in Cuba since 1988 after being imprisoned in Mexico for
several years. In 1978, both of his hands were maimed by a bomb he was making. He was
convicted in New York on weapons charges in 1979 and sentenced to 10 years in prison and 5
years’ probation, but he escaped from prison the same year.246 In addition to Chesimard and other
fugitives from the past, a number of U.S. fugitives from justice wanted for Medicare and other
types of insurance fraud have fled to Cuba in recent years.247
Although the United States and Cuba have an extradition treaty in place dating to 1905, in
practice the treaty has not been utilized. Instead, for more than a decade, Cuba has returned
wanted fugitives to the United States on a case-by-case basis. For example, in 2011, U.S.
Marshals picked up a husband and wife in Cuba who were wanted for a 2010 murder in New
Jersey,248 and in April 2013, Cuba returned a Florida couple who allegedly had kidnapped their
own children (who were in the custody of the mother’s parents) and fled to Havana.249 More
242 U.S. Department of State, “United States and Cuba Hold Claims Discussion,” Miami Herald, July 28, 2016.
243 U.S. Department of State, Country Reports on Terrorism 2014, April 2015.
244 U.S. Department of State, Country Reports on Terrorism 2007, April 30, 2008.
245 FBI, Most Wanted Terrorists, Joanne Deborah Chesimard, poster, at http://www.fbi.gov/wanted/wanted_terrorists/
joanne-deborah-chesimard/view.
246 James Anderson, “Living in Exile, Maimed Guerrilla Maintains Low-Key Profile in Cuba,” Fort Worth Star-
Telegram, January 16, 2000; Vanessa Bauza, “FBI’s Fugitive Is Cuba’s Political Refugee,” South Florida Sun-Sentinel,
May 26, 2002; Mary Jordan, “Fugitives Sought by U.S. Find a Protector in Cuba,” Washington Post, September 2,
2002; FBI, Wanted by the FBI, William “Guillermo” Morales, poster, at https://www.fbi.gov/wanted/dt/william-
guillermo-morales.
247 For example, see the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of Florida, “Thirty-Three Defendants Charged in
Staged Automobile Accident Scheme,” press release, May 16, 2013; and Jay Weaver, “Grandma Rips Off Medicare,
Skips Town, Latest Fraud Fugitive Likely Fled to Cuba,” Miami Herald, January 5, 2017.
248 George Mast, “Murder Suspects Caught in Cuba,” Courier-Post (New Jersey), September 30, 2011.
249 Paul Haven and Peter Orsi, “Cuba Says It Will Give U.S. Florida Couple Who Allegedly Kidnapped Children,”
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recently, in August 2018, Cuba arrested and returned to the United States a long-sought U.S.
fugitive from justice wanted in connection with ecoterrorism who had stopped in Cuba on his
way to Russia.250 In February 2018, Cuba successfully prosecuted a Cuban national who had fled
to Cuba after murdering a doctor in Florida in 2015—the main witness was a Palm Beach
detective.251
Cuba generally, however, has refused to render to U.S. justice any fugitive judged by Cuba to be
“political,” such as Chesimard, who they believe could not receive a fair trial in the United States.
Moreover, in the past Cuba has responded to U.S. extradition requests by stating that approval
would be contingent upon the United States returning wanted Cuban criminals from the United
States.
When President Trump announced his policy toward Cuba on June 16, 2017, he called for Cuba
to return to the United States U.S. fugitives from justice and specifically called for the return of
Joanne Chesimard.252 Cuban Foreign Minister Rodríguez rejected the return of certain political
refugees, such as Chesimard, who had received asylum from the Cuban government.
In the 115th Congress, the explanatory statement (Division K) to the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141) directed the Secretary of State to engage the government of Cuba “to
resolve cases of fugitives from justice, including persons sought by the United States Department
of Justice for such crimes committed in the United States, such as Joanne Chesimard.” Two
resolutions also have been introduced, H.Res. 664 (King) and S.Res. 391(Menendez), that would
call for the immediate extradition or rendering to the United States of all fugitives from justice in
Cuba who are receiving safe harbor to escape prosecution or confinement for criminal offenses
committed in the United States. Another initiative, H.R. 1744 (Smith, New Jersey), would require
a report on fugitives from U.S. justice in Cuba and U.S. efforts to secure the return of such
fugitives.
Outlook
Although First Vice President Miguel Díaz-Canel succeeded Raúl Castro as president in April
2018, any near-term change to the government’s one-party communist political system appears
unlikely. Raúl Castro is continuing as first secretary of the Cuban Communist Party until 2021,
which could portend Castro’s continued influence over government policy. Nevertheless, at 58
years of age, Díaz-Canel’s government brings to power a leader from a new generation and can
be viewed as the culmination of generational change in Cuba’s governmental institutions that
began several years ago. The government of Raúl Castro began the implementation of significant
economic policy changes, moving toward a more mixed economy with a stronger private sector,
but its slow gradualist approach did not produce major improvements to the Cuban economy.
Although most observers do not expect immediate policy changes under the Díaz-Canel
government, the new president faces two significant challenges—moving forward with economic
reforms that produce results and responding to desires for greater freedom. At this juncture, Cuba
is the midst of a process to update its constitution that will be subject to a referendum in 2019.
Although the changes appear to lock in some market-oriented reforms, the constitution still
ensures the state sector’s dominance over the economy and the role of the Communist Party in the
Associated Press, April 9, 2013.
250 “Suspected Eco-Terrorist Arrested in Cuba after 20 Years as a Fugitive,” CBS News, August 11, 2018.
251 Mimi Whitefield, “This Florida Murder Case Was Tried in Cuba. And Local Prosecutors Got to Watch,” Miami
Herald, August 30, 2018.
252 White House, “Remarks by President Trump on the Policy of the United States Toward Cuba,” June 16, 2017.
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political system as the only official party. New regulations governing the nascent private sector
will go into effect in December 2018, which could stifle the growth of private enterprise.
The Obama Administration’s shift in U.S. policy toward Cuba opened up engagement with the
Cuban government in a variety of areas. Economic linkages with Cuba increased because of the
policy changes, although to what extent they will continue to increase is uncertain given that the
overall embargo and numerous other sanctions against Cuba remain in place.
President Trump’s partial rollback of Obama-era changes has limited opportunities for U.S.
business engagement and contributed to a downturn in American travel to Cuba in the second half
of 2017 and first part of 2018, although some reports indicate that travel is again on the upswing.
The U.S. decision to downsize the diplomatic staff of the U.S. Embassy in Havana in response to
unexplained injuries to U.S. diplomatic personnel in Cuba has resulted in the suspension of most
visa processing at the embassy and reduced other embassy operations, which has made bilateral
engagement and existing areas of government-to-government cooperation more difficult.
Just as there were diverse opinions in the 114th Congress over U.S. policy toward Cuba, debate
over Cuba policy has continued in the 115th Congress, especially with regard to U.S. economic
sanctions. The human rights situation in Cuba has remained a key congressional concern,
although with diverse views over the best approach to influence the Cuban government. Looking
ahead, Cuban government actions on human rights record likely will be a factor affecting future
efforts to normalize bilateral relations.
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Appendix A. Legislative Initiatives in the 115th
Congress
Enacted Legislation and Approved Resolutions
P.L. 115-31 (H.R. 244). Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017. Introduced January 4, 2017, as
the Honoring Investments in Recruiting and Employing American Military Veterans Act of 2017;
subsequently, the bill became the vehicle for the FY2017 appropriations measure known as the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017. House agreed to Senate amendments (309-118) May 3,
2017; Senate agreed to House amendment to Senate amendments (79-18) May 4, 2017. President
signed into law May 5, 2017.
Division C (Department of Defense), Section 8127, provided that none of the
funds made available in the act may be used to carry out the closure or
realignment of the U.S. Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Division J (State Department and Foreign Operations), Section 7007, continued a
long-standing provision prohibiting direct funding for the government of Cuba
(including direct loans, credits, insurance, and guarantees of the Export-Import
Bank). Section 7015(f) continues to require that foreign aid for Cuba not be
obligated or expended except as provided through the regular notification
procedures of the Committees on Appropriations.
The explanatory statement to the measure provided $20 million in democracy
assistance for Cuba ($5 million more than requested) and $28.056 million for the
Office of Cuba Broadcasting ($1 million more than requested).
P.L. 115-91 (H.R. 2810). National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2018.
H.R. 2810 introduced June 7, 2017; reported (H.Rept. 115-200) by House Committee on Armed
Services July 6, 2017. S. 1519 introduced and reported (S.Rept. 115-125) by the Senate
Committee on Armed Services July 10, 2017. House passed H.R. 2810, amended, July 14, 2017.
Senate passed H.R. 2810, amended, September 18, 2017.
Section 1026 of the House-approved version H.R. 2810 would continue a provision in the
FY2017 NDAA (P.L. 114-328, Section 1035) prohibiting funds made available for the
Department of Defense (DOD) for FY2018 from being used to close or abandon the U.S. Naval
Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, relinquish control of Guantanamo Bay to Cuba, or implement
a material modification to a 1934 treaty between the United States and Cuba that constructively
closes the naval station. Section 1034 of the Senate-approved version of H.R. 2810 would have
extended the provision regarding the realignment or closure of the U.S. naval station in P.L. 114-
328 from FY2017 through FY2021.
Conference report (H.Rept. 115-404) filed November 9, 2017. In the conference report, the
Senate receded and accepted the House language on the provision regarding the U.S. Naval
Station. Section 1036 continues to prohibit funds made available for DOD for FY2018 from
being used to close or abandon the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, relinquish
control of Guantanamo Bay to Cuba, or implement a material modification to a 1934 treaty
between the United States and Cuba that constructively closes the naval station. The House
agreed (356-70) to the conference report November 14, and the Senate agreed (voice vote) to it
on November 16, 2017. Signed into law December 12, 2017.
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P.L. 115-141 (H.R. 1625). Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018. Originally introduced March
20, 2017, as the Targeted Rewards for the Global Eradication of Human Trafficking Act, in March
2018, the bill became the vehicle for the FY2018 omnibus appropriations measure known as the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018. House agreed (256-167) to an amendment to the Senate
amendment March 22, 2018; Senate agreed (65-32) to the House amendment to the Senate
amendment March 23, 2018. President signed into law March 23, 2018. The measure did not
include policy provisions tightening sanctions or limiting funding for a U.S. diplomatic presence
that had been included in several FY2018 House appropriations bills (Commerce, H.R. 3267;
Financial Services, H.R. 3280; Homeland Security, H.R. 3355; and State Department and Foreign
Operations, H.R. 3362—all of which had been incorporated into House-passed H.R. 3354).
Division C (Department of Defense), Section 8123, carries over a prior-year
provision providing that none of the funds made available by the act may be used
to carry out the closure or realignment of the U.S. Naval Station, Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba.
Division J (Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies),
Section 128, provides that none of the funds made available by the act may be
used to carry out the closure or realignment of the U.S. Naval Station,
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Division K (State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs), Section 7007,
continues a long-standing provision prohibiting direct funding for the
government of Cuba, including direct loans, credits, insurance, and guarantees of
the Export-Import Bank or its agents. Section 7015(f) continues a long-standing
provision prohibiting the obligation or expending of assistance for Cuba except
through the regular notification procedures of the Committees on Appropriations.
The explanatory statement to H.R. 1625, Division K, provided $28.936 million
for Cuba broadcasting, $5.28 million more than requested. This compared to
$28.1 million recommended by the House appropriations bill (H.R. 3362,
H.Rept. 115-253) and not less than $28.6 million recommended by the Senate
appropriations bill (S. 1780, S.Rept. 115-152).
The explanatory statement provided $20 million for democracy programs in
Cuba, compared to the Administration’s zeroing out of the assistance. The House
appropriations bill would have provided $30 million in democracy assistance and
the Senate bill would have provided $15 million, with not less than $3 million to
support free enterprise and private business organizations in Cuba and people-to-
people educational and cultural activities.
In the explanatory statement, the Secretary of State is directed to engage with
foreign governments, such as the government of Cuba, not covered by Section
7067 of the act, “to resolve cases of fugitives from justice, including persons
sought by the United States Department of Justice for such crimes committed in
the United States, such as Joanne Chesimard.”
P.L. 115-232 (H.R. 5515). John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2019. Introduced April 13, 2018. House passed (351-66) May 24, 2018. Senate passed (85-10)
June 18, 2018, substituting the language of S. 2987, the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019. As approved by the Senate, H.R. 5515 had two Cuba-
related provisions: Section 1024 would extend the prohibition on the use of funds in FY2019 to
close or relinquish control of the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; Section 1027
would require the Defense Intelligence Agency to submit a report to the appropriate congressional
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committees within 180 days on security cooperation between Russia and Cuba, Nicaragua, and
Venezuela. Conference report (H.Rept. 115-874) filed July 25, 2018; House agreed (359-54) to
the conference July 26 and Senate agreed (86-10) August 1, 2018. Signed into law August 13,
2018.
As signed into law, Section 1032 extends the prohibition on the use of funds in FY2019 to close
or relinquish control of the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. In the conference
report, the conferees expressed concern about Russian military and intelligence activity in the
Western Hemisphere, urged the Department of Defense to engage in dialogue and cooperation on
security partners and allies in the region, and directed the Director of the Defense Intelligence
Agency to submit a report to several key committees on security cooperation between the Russian
Federation and Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela.
P.L. 115-244 (H.R. 5895). Energy and Water, Legislative Branch, and Military Construction and
Veterans Affairs Appropriations Act, 2019. Originally introduced as the Energy and Water
Appropriations bill on May 21, 2018, the bill subsequently also became the vehicle for the
Legislative Branch and Military Construction appropriations bills. House passed (235-179) June
8, 2018. Senate passed (235-179) June 25, 2018. Section 128 (Division C) of the House version
and Section 127 (Division C) of the Senate version would continue a provision prohibiting
funding to carry out the closure or realignment of the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba. Conference report, H.Rept. 115-929, filed September 10, 2018; Senate agreed to the
conference report September 12, and House agreed September 13. Signed into law September 21,
2018. In the final acted measure, Section 128 (Division C) would continue the funding
prohibition for FY2019 to carry out the closure or realignment of the naval station. (Also see H.R.
5786 and S. 3024 below.)
P.L. 115-245 (H.R. 6157). Department of Defense and Labor, Health, and Human Services, and
Education Appropriations Act, 2019, and Continuing Appropriations Act, 2019. H.R. 6157
introduced and reported by House Committee on Appropriations (H.Rept. 115-769) June 20,
2018, as the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2019. House passed (359-49) June 28,
2018. S. 3159 introduced and reported (S.Rept. 115-290) by the Senate Appropriations
Committee June 28, 2018. Senate passed (85-7) H.R. 6157 on August 23, 2018, substituting the
language of S. 3159 (defense) and S. 3158, covering the Departments of Labor, Health and
Human Services, and Education. Both the House and Senate versions of H.R. 6157 (Section 8115
in the House version and Section 8109 in the Senate version) had a provision to continue a
prohibition against FY2019 funds being used to carry out the closure or realignment of the U.S.
Naval Station, Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. Conference report, H.Rept. 115-952, filed September 13,
2018; Senate agreed to the conference September 18, and House agreed on September 26. Signed
into law September 28, 2018. In the final enacted measure, Section 8125 of Division A continues
the prohibition against FY2019 funds from being used to carry out the closure or realignment of
the naval station.
P.L. 115-254 (H.R. 302). FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018. Originally introduced as the Sports
Medicine Licensure Clarity Act of 2017 in January 2017, the bill became the legislative vehicle
for the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 in September 2018. As signed into law October 5, 2018,
the measure includes a provision in section 1957 requiring the Administrator of the
Transportation Security Administration (1) to direct all public charters to provide updated flight
data to more reliably track the public charter operations of air carriers between the United States
and Cuba and (2) to develop and implement a mechanism that corroborates and validates flight
schedule data to more reliably track the public charter operations of air carries between the
United States and Cuba. The provision also requires the TSA Administrator to provide to
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Congress a confidential briefing on certain aspects of security measure at airports in Cuba that
have air service to the United States.
S.Res. 224 (Durbin). The resolution recognizes the sixth anniversary of the death of Oswaldo
Payá Sardiñas (July 2012) and commemorates his legacy and commitment to democratic values
and principles. The resolution also calls on the Cuban government to allow an impartial, third-
party investigation into the circumstances of Payá’s death and to cease violating human rights,
begin providing democratic freedoms to Cuban citizens, and provide amnesty for political
prisoners. It urges the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to continue reporting on
human rights issues in Cuba and to request a visit to Cuba in order to investigate the
circumstances surrounding the death of Oswaldo Payá. It also urges the United States to continue
to support policies and programs that promote respect for human rights and democratic principles
in Cuba in a manner consistent with the aspirations of the Cuban people. Introduced July 19,
2017; reported by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, amended, March 21, 2018. Senate
agreed to the resolution by Unanimous Consent on April 11, 2018.
Additional Legislative Initiatives
H.Res. 664 (King)/S.Res. 391(Menendez). Similar resolutions would call for the immediate
extradition or rendering to the United States of convicted felons William Morales, Joanne
Chesimard, and all other fugitives from justices who are receiving safe harbor in Cuba to escape
prosecution or confinement for criminal offenses committed in the United States. H.Res. 664
introduced December 13, 2017; referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. S.Res.
391introduced February 5, 2018; referred to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.
H.R. 2 (Conaway)/S. 3042 (Roberts). 2018 Farm bill. H.R. 2 introduced May 3, 2018. S. 3042
introduced June 11, 2018; reported by Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry
June 18, 2018. House passed H.R. 2 (213-211) June 21, 2018. Senate passed (86-11) June 28,
2018, substituting the language of S. 3042, as amended. As approved by the Senate, H.R. 2 has a
provision, as amended by S.Amdt. 3364 (Rubio), that would permit funding for certain U.S.
export promotion programs (Market Access Program and Foreign Market Development
Cooperation Program) for U.S. agricultural products in Cuba, with the caveat that funds could not
be used in contravention with directives under the National Security Presidential Memorandum
issued by President Trump in June 2017 that prohibits transactions with entities owned,
controlled, or operated by or on behalf of military, intelligence, or security services of Cuba.
H.R. 351 (Sanford). Freedom to Travel Act of 2017. The bill would prohibit the President from
prohibiting or regulating travel to or from Cuba by U.S. citizens or legal residents. Introduced
January 6, 2017; referred to House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
H.R. 442 (Emmer)/S. 472 (Moran). Cuba Trade Act of 2017. Among its provisions, the
initiative would repeal or amend many provisions of law restricting trade and other relations with
Cuba, including in the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 (CDA; P.L. 102-484, Title XVII), the
Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-114), and the Trade
Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act of 2000 (TSRA; P.L. 106-387, Title IX). It would
repeal restrictions on private financing for Cuba but continue to prohibit U.S. government foreign
assistance or financial assistance, loans, loan guarantees, extension of credit, or other financing
for export to Cuba, albeit with presidential waiver authority for national security or humanitarian
reasons. The federal government would be prohibited from expending any funds to promote trade
with or develop markets in Cuba, although certain federal commodity promotion programs would
be allowed. H.R. 442 introduced January 11, 2017; referred to House Committee on Foreign
Affairs and in addition to the Committees on Ways and Means, Financial Services, and
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Agriculture. S. 472 introduced February 28, 2017; referred to the Senate Committee on Banking,
Housing, and Urban Affairs.
H.R. 498 (Cramer). Cuba Digital and Telecommunications Advancement Act of 2017, or the
Cuba DATA Act. Among its provisions, the bill would authorize the exportation of consumer
communications devices to Cuba and the provision of telecommunications services to Cuba and
would repeal certain provisions of the CDA and the LIBERTAD Act. Introduced January 12,
2017; referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and in addition to the Committee on
Energy and Commerce.
H.R. 525 (Crawford). Cuba Agricultural Exports Act. The bill would amend TSRA to permit
U.S. government assistance for agricultural exports under TSRA, but not if the recipient would be
an entity controlled by the Cuban government. The bill also would authorize both the private
financing of sales of agricultural commodities and investment for the development of an
agricultural business in Cuba as long as the business is not controlled by the Cuban government
or does not traffic in property of U.S. nationals confiscated by the Cuban government. Introduced
January 13, 2017; referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and in addition to the
Committees on Financial Services and Agriculture.
H.R. 572 (Serrano). Promoting American Agricultural and Medical Exports to Cuba Act of 2017.
Among its provisions, the bill would permanently redefine the term payment of cash in advance
to mean that payment is received before the transfer of title and release and control of the
commodity to the purchaser; authorize direct transfers between Cuban and U.S. financial
institutions for products exported under the terms of TSRA; establish an export promotion
program for U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba; permit nonimmigrant visas for Cuban nationals for
activities related to purchasing U.S. agricultural goods; repeal a trademark sanction related to
Cuba in a FY1999 omnibus appropriations measure (§211 of Division A, Title II, P.L. 105-277);
prohibit restrictions on travel to Cuba; repeal the on-site verification requirement for medical
exports to Cuba under the CDA; and establish an agricultural export promotion trust fund.
Introduced January 13, 2017; referred to House Committee on Foreign Affairs and in addition to
the Committees on Ways and Means, Judiciary, Agriculture, and Financial Services.
H.R. 573 (Serrano). Baseball Diplomacy Act. The bill would waive certain prohibitions with
respect to nationals of Cuba coming to the United States to play organized professional baseball.
Introduced January 13, 2017; referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and in addition
to the Committee on the Judiciary.
H.R. 574 (Serrano). Cuba Reconciliation Act. Among its provisions, the bill would lift the trade
embargo on Cuba by removing provisions of law restricting trade and other relations with Cuba;
authorize common carriers to install and repair telecommunications equipment and facilities in
Cuba and otherwise provide telecommunications services between the United States and Cuba;
and prohibit restrictions on travel to and from Cuba. Introduced January 13, 2017; referred to the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs and in addition to the Committees on Ways and Means,
Energy and Commerce, Financial Services, Judiciary, Oversight and Government Reform, and
Agriculture.
H.R. 1301 (Frelinghuysen). Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2017. Introduced March
2, 2017; referred to the House Committee on Appropriations and in addition to the Committee on
the Budget. House passed (371-48) March 8, 2017. As passed, Section 8127 provides that no
funds in the act may be used to carry out the closure or realignment of the U.S. Naval Station at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. (For further action, see P.L. 115-31 above.)
H.R. 1744 (Smith, New Jersey). Walter Patterson and Werner Foerster Justice and Extradition
Act. The bill would call for a report on fugitives from U.S. justice in Cuba, U.S. efforts to secure
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the return of such fugitives, and other information on those cases. Introduced March 27, 2017;
referred to Committee on Foreign Affairs.
H.R. 2966 (Rush). United States-Cuba Normalization Act of 2017. The bill would remove
provisions of law restricting trade and other relations with Cuba; authorize common carriers to
install and repair telecommunications equipment and facilities in Cuba, and otherwise provide
telecommunications services between the United States and Cuba; prohibit restrictions on travel
to and from Cuba and on transactions incident to such travel; call on the President to continue
discussions with Cuba for the purpose of settling claims of U.S. nationals for the taking of
property by the Cuban government and securing the protection of internationally recognized
human rights; extend nondiscriminatory trade treatment to the products of Cuba; and prohibit
limits on remittances to Cuba. Introduced June 20, 2017; referred to House Committee on Foreign
Affairs, and in addition to the Committees on Ways and Means, Energy and Commerce, the
Judiciary, Agriculture, and Financial Services.
H.R. 2998 (Dent)/S. 1557 (Moran). Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related
Agencies Appropriations Act, 2018. H.R. 2998 introduced and reported (H.Rept. 115-188) by the
House Appropriations Committee on Appropriations June 22, 2017. S. 1557 introduced and
reported (S.Rept. 115-130) by the Senate Committee on Appropriations July 13, 2017. Section
128 of the House bill and Section 127 of the Senate bill would provide that none of the funds
made available by this act may be used to carry out the closure or realignment or the U.S. Naval
Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The provision would extend the current similar provision for
FY2017 set forth in P.L. 115-31 (Division C, Section 8127). As stated in the House and Senate
committee reports to the respective bills, “the provision is intended to prevent the closure or
realignment of the installation out of the possession of the United States, and maintain the Naval
Station’s longstanding regional security and migrant operations missions.” The bill became a part
of a “minibus” appropriations package, H.R. 3219, approved by the House in July 2017, and a
full-year FY2018 omnibus appropriations bill, H.R. 3354, approved by the House in September
2017. For final action on FY2018 appropriations, see P.L. 115-141 above.
H.R. 3180 (Nunes). Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018. Introduced July 11,
2017, and reported by the House Committee on Intelligence July 24, 2017 (H.Rept. 115-251).
House passed (380-35) July 28, 2017. As approved, Section 609 would express the sense of
Congress that, pursuant to the statutory requirement for the intelligence community (IC) to keep
the congressional intelligence committees “fully and currently informed,” about all “intelligence
activities” of the United States, IC agencies must submit prompt written notification after
becoming aware that an individual in the executive branch has disclosed certain classified
information outside established intelligence channels to adversary foreign governments, which
are defined in the provision as the governments of North Korea, Iran, China, Russia, and Cuba.
The Senate companion bill, S. 1761 (Burr), does not include a similar provision. For additional
action, see H.R. 6237 below.
H.R. 3219 (Granger). Defense, Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, Legislative Branch, and
Energy and Water Development National Security Appropriations Act, 2018, or the Make
America Secure Appropriations Act, 2018. Introduced and reported (H.Rept. 115-219) July 13,
2017, by the House Committee on Appropriations as the Department of Defense Appropriations
Act, 2018, the bill subsequently became the vehicle for four other appropriations measures.
House approved (235-192) July 27, 2017. As approved, Section 8116 of Division A (Defense
appropriations) would provide that no funds made available by the act could be used to carry out
the closure or realignment of the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The provision
would extend the current similar provision for FY2017 set forth in P.L. 115-31 (Division C,
Section 8127). Section 128 of Division C (Military Construction appropriations) also would
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provide that none of the funds made available by the act may be used to carry out the closure or
realignment or the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Also see H.R. 3354 below, and
for final action on FY2018 appropriations, see P.L. 115-141 above.
H.R. 3267 (Culberson). Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations,
2018. Introduced and reported (H.Rept. 115-231) July 17, 2017, by the House Committee on
Appropriations. Section 536 would prohibit funds in the act from being used to approve the
registration, renewal, or maintenance of the registration of a mark, trade name, or commercial
name that was confiscated in Cuba unless the original owner has expressly consented. In the
report to the bill, the minority expressed the view that the provision was an inappropriate rider
that did not belong in the bill, which would place restrictions on the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office (USPTO’s) ability to issue trademarks to Cuban nationals, even in cases in which a
specific license has been issued by the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control. The minority stated that the provision would meddle in foreign policy, harm diplomatic
efforts with Cuba, and create a significant burden, and set an impossible standard for the USPTO.
The Senate companion bill, S. 1662, does not have a comparable provision. Also see H.R. 3354
below, and for final action on FY2018 appropriations, see P.L. 115-141 above.
H.R. 3280 (Graves). Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act, 2018.
Introduced and reported (H.Rept. 115-234) July 18, 2017, by the House Committee on
Appropriations. Section 130 would provide that no funds made available by the act could be used
to approve, license, facilitate, authorize, or otherwise allow the use, purchase, trafficking, or
import of property confiscated by the Cuban government. Section 131 would provide that no
funds made available by the act could be used to authorize a general license or approve a specific
license with respect to a mark, trade name, or commercial name that is substantially similar to one
that was used in connection with a business or assets that were confiscated by the Cuban
government unless the original owner expressly consented. Also see H.R. 3354 below, and for
final action on FY2018 appropriations, see P.L. 115-141 above.
H.R. 3328 (Katko)/S. 2023 (Rubio). Cuban Airport Security Act of 2017. Identical bills would
require, among other provisions, a briefing for the House Committee on Homeland Security,
Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, and the Comptroller General of
the United States regarding certain security measures and equipment at each of Cuba’s 10
international airports. The bill also would prohibit a U.S. air carrier from employing a Cuban
national in Cuba (pursuant to 31 CFR 515.573) unless the air carrier has publicly disclosed the
full text of the formal agreement between the air carrier and the Empresa Cubana de Aeropuertos
y Servicios Aeronauticos or any other entity associated with the Cuban government. The bill
would also, to the extent practicable, prohibit U.S. air carrier from hiring Cuban nationals if they
have been recruited, hired, or trained by entities that are owned, operated, or controlled in whole
or in part by Cuba’s Council of State, Council of Ministers, Communist Party, Ministry of the
Revolutionary Armed Forces, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, or Ministry of the Interior. H.R. 3328
introduced July 20, 2017; reported by the Committee on Homeland Security (H.Rept. 115-308)
and discharged by Committees on Foreign Affairs and Transportation September 13, 2017. House
passed (voice vote) October 23, 2017. S. 2023 introduced October 26, 2017; referred to the
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Also see action above on P.L. 115-254,
FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018.
H.R. 3354 (Calvert). Make America Sure and Prosperous Appropriations Act, 2018. Introduced
as the Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriation Act on July
21, 2017, the bill subsequently became the vehicle for the FY2018 omnibus appropriations
measure covering 12 FY2018 appropriations bills. House passed (211-198) September 14, 2017.
As approved by the House, the measure has numerous provisions on Cuba that were included in
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individual House Appropriations Committee-reported appropriations bills. For final action on
FY2018 appropriations, see P.L. 115-141 above.
Division C (Commerce, Justice, Science). Section 536 would prohibit funds in
the act from being used to approve the registration, renewal, or maintenance of
the registration of a mark, trade name, or commercial name that was confiscated
in Cuba unless the original owner has expressly consented. (See H.R. 3267
above.)
Division D (Financial Services and General Government). Section 130 would
provide that no funds made available by the act could be used to approve, license,
facilitate, authorize, or otherwise allow the use, purchase, trafficking, or import
of property confiscated by the Cuban government. Section 131 would provide
that no funds made available by the act could be used to authorize a general
license or approve a specific license with respect to a mark, trade name, or
commercial name that is substantially similar to one that was used in connection
with a business or assets that were confiscated by the Cuban government unless
the original owner expressly consented. (See H.R. 3280 above.)
Division E (Homeland Security). Section 208 would prohibit funds from being
used to approve, license, facilitate, authorize, or allow the trafficking or import of
property confiscated by the Cuban government. (See H.R. 3355 below.)
Division G (State Department and Foreign Operations). Section 7007 would
prohibit direct funding for the government of Cuba. Section 7015(f) would
require notification to the Committees on Appropriations for funds for assistance
to Cuba. Section 7045(c)(1) would prohibit funding in the act and prior
appropriation measures for the establishment or operation of a U.S. diplomatic
presence in Cuba beyond that which was in existence prior to December 17,
2014. Section 7045(c)(2) would provide $30 million in Economic Support Fund
assistance to promote democracy and strengthen civil society but would prohibit
the obligation of funds for business promotion, economic reform,
entrepreneurship, or any other assistance that is not democracy-building as
expressly authorized in the LIBERTAD Act of 1996 and the CDA of 1992. (See
H.R. 3362 below.)
Division I (Defense). Section 8116 would provide that no funds made available
by the act could be used to carry out the closure or realignment of the U.S. Naval
Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. (See H.R. 3219 above.)
Division K (Military Construction). Section 128 would provide that none of the
funds made available by this act may be used to carry out the closure or
realignment or the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. (See H.R. 2998
and H.R. 3219 above.)
H.R. 3355 (Carter). Department of Homeland Security Appropriations, 2018. Introduced and
reported (H.Rept. 115-239) July 21, 2017, by the House Committee on Appropriations. Section
208 would prohibit funds from being used to approve, license, facilitate, authorize, or allow the
trafficking or import of property confiscated by the Cuban government. Also see H.R. 3354
above, and for final action on FY2018 appropriations see P.L. 115-141 above.
H.R. 3362 (Rogers)/S. 1780 (Graham). Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related
Programs Appropriations, 2018. H.R. 3362 introduced and reported (H.Rept. 115-253) by the
House Committee on Appropriations on July 24, 2017. S. 1780 introduced and reported (S.Rept.
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115-152) by the Senate Appropriations Committee September 7, 2017. Also see H.R. 3354 above,
and for final action on FY2018 appropriations, see P.L. 115-141 above.
Both bills would continue two long-standing provisions: Section 7007 would
prohibit direct funding for the government of Cuba, and Section 7015(f) would
require notification to the Committees on Appropriations for funds for assistance
to Cuba.
Section 7045(c)(1) of the House bill would prohibit funding in the act and prior
appropriation measures for the establishment or operation of a U.S. diplomatic
presence in Cuba beyond that which was in existence prior to December 17,
2014, including the hiring of additional staff, unless such staff are necessary for
protecting the health, safety, or security of diplomatic personnel or facilities in
Cuba; the prohibition would not apply for support of democracy-building efforts
for Cuba or if the President determines that Cuba has met the requirements and
factors specified in Section 205 of the LIBERTAD Act of 1996 for determining
when a transition government is in power in Cuba.
Section 7045(c)(2) of the House bill would provide $30 million in Economic
Support Funds (ESF) assistance to promote democracy and strengthen civil
society but would prohibit the obligation of funds for business promotion,
economic reform, entrepreneurship, or any other assistance that is not
democracy-building as expressly authorized in the LIBERTAD Act of 1996 and
the CDA of 1992. In the Senate bill, Section 7045(c) would provide $15 million
in ESF for democracy programs in Cuba; of this, the provision would provide
that not less than $3 million be made available to USAID to support free
enterprise and private business organizations in Cuba and people-to-people
educational and cultural activities, which shall be considered democracy
programs except no funds may be used for assistance to the Cuban government.
The report to the House bill would provide not less than $28.056 million for the
Office of Cuba Broadcasting, whereas the report to the Senate bill would provide
$28.569 million.
H.R. 4583 (Wilson, Joe). Ensuring Diplomats’ Safety Act. The bill would suspend all U.S.
diplomatic presence in Cuba until the conclusion of any U.S. law enforcement investigation
relating to “the attacks on 17 United States diplomats.” Introduced December 7, 2017; referred to
the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
H.R. 5786 (Dent)/S. 3024 (Boozman). Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related
Agencies Appropriations Act, 2019. H.R. 5786 introduced and reported (H.Rept. 115-673) by the
House Committee on Appropriations May 11, 2018. S. 3024 introduced and reported (H.Rept.
115-269) by the Senate Appropriations Committee June 7, 2018. Section 128 of the House bill
and Section 127 of the Senate bill would continue a provision prohibiting funding to carry out the
closure or realignment of the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. (For further action,
see P.L. 115-244 above)
H.R. 5952 (Culberson). Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations,
2019. Introduced and reported (H.Rept. 115-704 ) by the House Appropriations Committee May
24, 2018). Section 535 would prohibit funds in the act from being used to approve the
registration, renewal, or maintenance of the registration of a mark, trade name, or commercial
name that was confiscated in Cuba unless the original owner has expressly consented. In the
report to the bill, the minority expressed the view that the provision was an inappropriate rider
that did not belong in the bill, which would place restrictions on the U.S. Patent and Trademark
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Office (USPTO’s) ability to issue trademarks to Cuban nationals, even in cases in which a
specific license has been issued by the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control. The minority stated that the provision would meddle in foreign policy, harm diplomatic
efforts with Cuba, and create a significant burden, and set an impossible standard for the USPTO.
The Senate companion bill, S. 3072, does not have a comparable provision.
H.R. 6147 (Calvert). Interior, Environment, and Financial Services and General Government
Appropriations, 2019. Originally introduced as the FY2019 Department of the Interior,
Environment, and Related Agencies appropriations bill, the measure also became the House
vehicle for Financial Services and General Government appropriations and incorporated the
House version of H.R. 6258 as Division B; House passed (217-199) July 19, 2018. As approved
by the House: Section 128 would provide that no funds made available by the act could be used to
approve, license, facilitate, authorize, or otherwise allow the use, purchase, trafficking, or import
of property confiscated by the Cuban government; Section 129 would provide that no funds made
available by the act could be used to authorize a general license or approve a specific license with
respect to a mark, trade name, or commercial name that is substantially similar to one that was
used in connection with a business or assets that were confiscated by the Cuban government
unless the original owner expressly consented. The Senate version of the bill, approved (92-6)
August 1, 2018, also became the vehicle for Financial Services and General Government,
Agriculture, and Transportation, Housing and Urban Development appropriations; it did not
include the two Cuba-related provisions in the House version. Also see H.R. 6258 below.
H.R. 6237 (Nunes). Matthew Young Pollard Intelligence Authorization for Fiscal Years 2018 and
2019. Introduced June 27, 2018; reported (H.Rept. 115-805) by the House Committee on
Intelligence July 3, 2018. House passed (363-54) July 12, 2018. As approved, the bill includes a
provision that would express the sense of Congress that, pursuant to the statutory requirement for
the intelligence community (IC) to keep the congressional intelligence committees “fully and
currently informed,” about all “intelligence activities” of the United States, IC agencies must
submit prompt written notification after becoming aware that an individual in the executive
branch has disclosed certain classified information outside established intelligence channels to
adversary foreign governments, which are defined in the provision as the governments of North
Korea, Iran, China, Russia, and Cuba. The Senate companion bill, S. 3153 (Burr), does not
include a similar provision.
H.R. 6258 (Graves). Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act, 2019.
Introduced and reported (H.Rept. 115-792) by the House Committee on Appropriations June 28,
2018. Section 128 would provide that no funds made available by the act could be used to
approve, license, facilitate, authorize, or otherwise allow the use, purchase, trafficking, or import
of property confiscated by the Cuban government. Section 129 would provide that no funds made
available by the act could be used to authorize a general license or approve a specific license with
respect to a mark, trade name, or commercial name that is substantially similar to one that was
used in connection with a business or assets that were confiscated by the Cuban government
unless the original owner expressly consented. The Senate companion bill, S. 3107, does not have
similar provisions. Also see H.R. 6147 for additional legislative action.
H.R. 6385 (Rogers)/S. 3108 (Graham). Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related
Programs Appropriations, 2019. House Appropriations Committee introduced and reported H.R.
6385 (H.Rept. 115-829) on July 16, 2018. Senate Appropriations Committee introduced and
reported S. 3108 (S.Rept. 115-282) June 21, 2018. Both bills would continue long-standing
provisions prohibiting direct funding for the government of Cuba and prohibiting the obligation
or expending of assistance for Cuba except through the regular notification procedures of the
Committees on Appropriations. The draft House bill would provide $30 million to promote
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democracy and strengthen civil society in Cuba, with, according to the draft report to the bill, not
less than $8 million for the National Endowment for Democracy; the draft report would prohibit
the obligation of funds for business promotion, economic reform, entrepreneurship, or any other
assistance that is not democracy-building and stipulate that grants exceeding $1 million or to be
implemented over a period of 12 months would be awarded only to organizations with experience
promoting democracy inside Cuba. In the Senate bill, Section 7045(c) would provide $15 million
for democracy programs in Cuba. With regard to Cuba broadcasting, the draft House report would
provide $29.1 million and the Senate report would provide $29.2 million. The report to the Senate
bill would also call for a State Department Cuba report on Internet access, the use of cell phones
to access data, the impact of access to telecommunications technology on increased political and
economic opportunities, and the impact of telecommunications development on human rights.
S.Res. 511 (Rubio)/H.Res. 916 (Diaz-Balart). Similar but not identical resolutions would honor
Las Damas de Blanco as the recipient of the 2018 Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty.
S.Res. 511 introduced May 16, 2018; referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. H.Res. 916
introduced May 25, 2018; referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs.
S. 259 (Nelson)/H.R. 1450 (Issa). No Stolen Trademarks Honored in America Act. The initiative
would modify a 1998 prohibition (§211 of Division A, Tile II, P.L. 105-277) on recognition by
U.S. courts of certain rights to certain marks, trade names, or commercial names. The bill would
apply a fix so that the sanction would apply to all nationals and would bring the sanction into
compliance with a 2002 World Trade Organization dispute settlement ruling. S. 259 introduced
February 1, 2017; referred to the Senate Committee on the Judiciary. H.R. 1450 introduced March
9, 2017; referred to House Committee on the Judiciary.
S. 275 (Heitkamp). Agricultural Export Expansion Act of 2017. The bill would amend TSRA to
allow private financing by U.S. persons of sales of agricultural commodities to Cuba. Introduced
February 2, 2017; referred to Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
S. 539 (Cruz). The bill would designate the area between the intersections of 16th Street,
Northwest and Fuller Street, Northwest, and 16th Street, Northwest, and Euclid Street, Northwest,
in Washington, DC, as “Oswaldo Paya Way.” Introduced March 7, 2017; referred to the
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
S. 1286 (Klobuchar). Freedom to Export to Cuba Act of 2017. The bill would repeal or amend
many provisions of law restricting trade and other relations with Cuba, including certain
restrictions in the CDA, the LIBERTAD Act, and TSRA. Introduced May 25, 2016; referred to
the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
S. 1287 (Flake). Freedom for Americans to Travel Act of 2017. The bill would prohibit the
President from regulating travel to or from Cuba by U.S. citizens or legal residents, or any of the
transactions incident to such travel, including banking transactions. It would provide for the
President to regulate such travel or restrictions on a case-by-case basis if the President determines
that such restriction is necessary to protect the national security of the United States or is
necessary to protect the health or safety of U.S. citizens or legal residents resulting from traveling
to or from Cuba; to implement such a restriction, the President would be required to submit a
written justification not later than seven days to several congressional committees. Introduced
May 25, 2017; referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
S. 1655 (Collins). Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development, and Related Agencies
Appropriations Act, 2018. Introduced and reported (S.Rept. 115-138) July 27, 2017. Section 119E
would have allowed foreign air carriers traveling to or from Cuba to make transit stops in the
United States for refueling and other technical services.
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S. 1699 (Wyden). United States-Cuba Trade Act of 2017. The bill, among its provisions, would
repeal or amend provisions of law restricting trade and other relations with Cuba; amend
authorize common carriers to install, maintain, and repair telecommunications equipment and
facilities in Cuba and provided telecommunications services between the United States and Cuba;
prohibit restrictions on travel to Cuba; call for the President to take all necessary steps to advance
negotiations with the Cuban government for settling property claims of U.S. nationals and for
securing the protection of internationally recognized human rights; extend nondiscriminatory
trade treatment to Cuba; prohibit restrictions on remittances to Cuba; and require a presidential
report to Congress prior to the denial of foreign tax credit with respect to certain foreign
countries. Introduced August 1, 2017; referred to the Senate Committee on Finance.
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Appendix B. Links to U.S. Government Reports
U.S. Relations with Cuba, Fact Sheet, Department of State
Date: November 8, 2017
Full Text: https://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2886.htm
Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations FY2019, Appendix 2, pp. 474-
475, Department of State
Date: March 14, 2018
Full Text: https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/279517.pdf
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2017, Cuba, Department of State
Date: April 20, 2018
Full Text: https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/277567.pdf
Cuba web page, Department of State
Link: https://www.state.gov/p/wha/ci/cu/index.htm
Cuba web page, Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security
Link: https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/policy-guidance/country-guidance/sanctioned-
destinations/cuba
Cuba web page, Department of Agriculture, Foreign Agricultural Service
Link: https://www.fas.usda.gov/regions/cuba
Cuba Sanctions web page, Department of the Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control
Link: https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Programs/Pages/cuba.aspx
International Religious Freedom Report for 2017, Cuba, Department of State
Date: May 29, 2018
Full Text: https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/281308.pdf
International Narcotics Control Strategy Report 2018, Volume I, Drug and Chemical Control,
p. 146, Department of State
Date: March 2018
Link: http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/278759.pdf
International Narcotics Control Strategy Report 2018, Volume II, Money Laundering, pp. 85-
87, Department of State
Date: March 2018
Link: http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/278760.pdf
Overview of Cuban Imports of Goods and Services and Effects of U.S. Restrictions, U.S.
International Trade Commission, Publication 4597
Date: March 2016
Link: https://www.usitc.gov/sites/default/files/publications/332/pub4597_0.pdf
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Trafficking in Persons Report 2018, Cuba, Department of State
Date: June 2018
Link: https://www.state.gov/j/tip/rls/tiprpt/countries/2018/282640.htm
Author Information
Mark P. Sullivan
Specialist in Latin American Affairs
Disclaimer
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