Cuba: Challenges for U.S. Policymakers in 2021




INSIGHTi
Cuba: Challenges for U.S. Policymakers in
2021

February 22, 2021
Among the chal enges facing the Biden Administration and the 117th Congress is the future direction of
U.S. policy toward Cuba. Most observers expect the Biden Administration to shift policy to focus on
engagement and away from the numerous sanctions imposed by the Trump Administration. During the
U.S. election campaign, then-candidate Joe Biden said he would reverse the “failed Trump polices that
have inflicted harm on the Cuban people and done nothing to advance democracy and human rights.”

Both the White House and the State Department maintain that U.S. policy toward Cuba is to be governed
by two principles: one grounded in support for democracy and human rights; and one recognizing that
Americans, especial y Cuban Americans, are the best ambassadors for advancing freedom and prosperity
in Cuba.
Cuba remains a one-party authoritarian state with a state-dominated economy. President Miguel Díaz-
Canel succeeded Raúl Castro as president in 2018 and is expected to succeed Castro as head of Cuba’s
Communist Party at the next party congress in April 2021. A November 2020 government crackdown on
the San Isidro Movement, a civil society group opposed to restrictions on artistic expression, focused
international attention on Cuba’s poor human rights record. The Cuban economy, estimated by the Cuban
government to have contracted 11% in 2020, has been hard-hit by the economic effects of the
Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, reduced support (especial y oil) from Venezuela, and
increased U.S. economic sanctions. Over the past decade, Cuba’s implementation of market-oriented
economic reforms has been slow. In January 2021, however, the government carried out a long-
anticipated currency reform and in February, announced an expansion of permissible smal private-sector
businesses, although many activities wil stil be restricted.
U.S. Policy Background
Since the early 1960s, the centerpiece of U.S. policy toward Cuba has been economic sanctions, including
a trade embargo, initial y aimed at isolating Cuba’s government as it moved toward close relations with
the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Congress has played an active role in shaping the policy, including
by enacting legislation to tighten—and at times ease—U.S. economic sanctions. The Cuban Liberty and
Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-114) includes a variety of measures to increase
pressure on Cuba, provides for a plan to assist Cuba once it begins a transition to democracy, and sets
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forth political and human rights conditions for lifting economic sanctions. The Trade Sanctions Reform
and Export Enhancement Act of 2000
(P.L. 106-387, Title IX) authorizes U.S. agricultural exports to
Cuba but prohibits U.S. government export assistance and private financing for such exports.
Shift Toward Engagement Under the Obama Administration
In late 2014, the Obama Administration initiated a Cuba policy shift away from sanctions and toward
normalized relations. Changes included the rescission of the Cuban government’s designation as a state
sponsor of international terrorism
(2015); the restoration of diplomatic relations (2015); and an easing of
restrictions
on travel, remittances, trade, telecommunications, and banking and financial services
(2015/2016). The restoration of relations led to increased government-to-government engagement,
including over 20 bilateral agreements and numerous dialogues.
Return to Sanctions-Focused Policy Under the Trump Administration
In 2017, President Trump unveiled his Administration’s Cuba policy in a national security presidential
memorandum
that introduced new sanctions and rolled back efforts to normalize relations in order to
encourage the government to improve political and economic rights. The Administration restricted
financial transactions with entities controlled by the Cuban military, intel igence, and security services;
and the State Department’s “Cuba restricted list” was updated several times, most recently in January
2021. In 2017, the State Department significantly reduced the staff of the U.S. Embassy in Havana in
response to unexplained health injuries of members of the U.S. diplomatic community. The reduction
affected embassy operations, especial y visa processing.
From 2019 to January 2021, the Administration increased sanctions, especial y on remittances and travel,
to pressure Cuba on human rights and for supporting the authoritarian Venezuelan government of Nicolás
Maduro. Restrictions on remittances led to the closure of more than 400 Western Union offices in Cuba in
November 2020. Restrictions on travel eliminated people-to-people educational travel, prohibited cruise
ship travel, limited flights, and prohibited U.S. travelers from staying at hundreds of properties identified
by the State Department as owned or controlled by the Cuban government. Other sanctions include
restrictions on U.S. commercial engagement with Cuba and efforts to stop Venezuelan oil exports to
Cuba. In January 2021, then-Secretary of State Pompeo designated the Cuban government as a state
sponsor of international terrorism.
He justified the decision by noting Cuba has harbored several U.S.
fugitives since the 1970s and several members of Colombia’s National Liberation Army, a U.S.-
designated foreign terrorist organization, since 2017.
117th Congress
Any change in U.S. policy toward Cuba in the Biden Administration wil likely be the subject of
congressional debate and oversight. Past congresses supported U.S. funding for human rights and
democracy programs
and U.S.-government sponsored broadcasting to Cuba as wel as resolutions
expressing concern about human rights, but views often diverged regarding the best approach to influence
the Cuban government’s behavior. These differing approaches may continue in the 117th Congress. Some
experts contend that engagement is more effective in advancing human rights and economic reform and
cal for the Administration to reverse recent sanctions decisions, reestablish bilateral dialogues and
cooperation on areas of mutual interest, and conduct high-level direct diplomacy for resolving long-
standing disputes (for example, S. 249 would lift sanctions and cal for negotiations on property claims
and human rights). Others maintain that sanctions have led to some positive Cuban economic reforms and
that the United States should continue pressuring the Cuban government until it fulfil s the conditions set
forth in the LIBERTAD Act (for example, H.R. 287 would prohibit the rescission of Cuba’s state sponsor
of terrorism designation until such conditions are met).


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Also see CRS In Focus IF10045, Cuba: U.S. Policy Overview; CRS Report R45657, Cuba: U.S. Policy in
the 116th Congress and Through the Trump Administration
;
CRS Report R43835, State Sponsors of Acts
of International Terrorism—Legislative Parameters: In Brief
; and CRS Report RL31139, Cuba: U.S.
Restrictions on Travel and Remittances.

Author Information

Mark P. Sullivan
Dianne E. Rennack
Specialist in Latin American Affairs
Specialist in Foreign Policy Legislation





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