Anger and anguish spread across Cuba as it learns of Trump's tariff threat on those who provide oil
- - Anger and anguish spread across Cuba as it learns of Trump's tariff threat on those who provide oil
DĂNICA COTO January 30, 2026 at 7:02 PM
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1 / 5Cuba Gas LinesDrivers wait in a long line to enter a gas station in Havana, Cuba, Friday, Jan. 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)
HAVANA (AP) â Massive power outages in Cuba meant that many people awoke Friday unaware that U.S. President Donald Trump had threatened to impose tariffs on any country that sells or supplies oil to the Caribbean island.
As word spread in Havana and beyond, anger and anguish boiled over about the decision that will only make life harder for Cubans already struggling with an increase in U.S. sanctions.
âThis is a war,â said LĂĄzaro Alfonso, an 89-year-old retired graphic designer.
He described Trump as the âsheriff of the worldâ and said he feels like heâs living in the Wild West, where anything goes.
After Trump made the announcement late Thursday, he described Cuba as a âfailing nationâ and said, âit looks like itâs something thatâs just not going to be able to survive.â
Alfonso, who lived through the severe economic depression in the 1990s known as the â Special Period â following cuts in Soviet aid, said the current situation in Cuba is worse, given the severe blackouts, a lack of basic goods and a scarcity of fuel.
âThe only thing thatâs missing here in Cuba ⊠is for bombs to start falling,â he said.
Cuba is hit every day with widespread outages blamed on fuel shortages and crumbling infrastructure that have deepened an economic crisis exacerbated by a fall in tourism, an increase in U.S. sanctions and a failed internal financial reform to unify the currency. Now Cubans worry new restrictions on oil shipments will only make things worse.
âCuba is a threat to Cubansâ
On Friday, Cuban President Miguel DĂaz-Canel said on X that Trump's measure was âfascist, criminal and genocidalâ and asserted that his administration âhas hijacked the interests of the American people for purely personal gain.â
Meanwhile, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno RodrĂguez wrote on X that Trumpâs measure âconstitutes an unusual and extraordinary threatâ and said he was declaring an international emergency.
Venezuelaâs government also condemned the measure in a statement Friday, saying it violates international law and the principles of global commerce.
Trump previously said he would halt oil shipments from Venezuela, Cubaâs biggest ally, after the U.S. attacked the South American country and arrested its leader.
Meanwhile, there is speculation that Mexico would slash its shipments to Cuba.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said Friday that she would seek alternatives to continue helping Cuba and prevent a humanitarian crisis after Trump's announcement.
Sheinbaum said one option could be for the United States itself to manage the shipment of Mexican oil to the island, although it was necessary to first understand the details of Trumpâs order.
Mexico became a key supplier of fuel to Cuba, along with Russia, after the U.S. sanctions on Venezuela paralyzed the delivery of crude oil to the island.
âItâs impossible to live like this,â said Yanius Cabrera MacĂas, 47, a Cuban street vendor who sells bread and sweet snacks.
He said he doesnât believe Cuba is a threat to the United States.
âCuba is a threat to Cubans, not to the United States. For us Cubans here, it is the government that is a threat to us,â he said, adding that Trumpâs latest measure would hit hard. âIn the end, itâs the people who suffer ⊠not the governments.â
The backbone of Cuba's economy
Jorge Piñon, an expert at the University of Texas Energy Institute who tracks shipments using satellite technology, said a key question remains unanswered: how many days' worth of fuel does Cuba have?
If no tanker looms in the horizon within the next four to eight weeks, Piñón warned Cuba's future would be grim.
âThis is now a critical situation because the only country we had doubts about was Mexico,â he said, noting that diesel is âthe backbone of the Cuban economy.â
Piñón noted that the Chinese don't have oil, and that all they could do is give Cuba credit to buy oil from a third party. Meanwhile, he called Russia a âwild card: It has so many sanctions that one more doesnât bother (Vladimir) Putin," adding that because of those sanctions, a lot of Russian oil is looking for a destination.
Meanwhile, many Cubans continue to live largely in darkness.
Luis Alberto Mesa Acosta, a 56-year-old welder, said he is often unable to work because of the ongoing outages, which remind him of the âSpecial Periodâ that he endured.
âI donât see the end of the tunnel anywhere,â he said, adding that Cubans need to come together and help each other.
Daily demand for power in Cuba averages some 3,000 megawatts, roughly half what is available during peak hours.
Dayanira Herrera, mother of a five-year-old boy, said she struggles to care for him because of the outages, noting they spend evenings on their stoop.
She couldnât believe it when she heard on Wednesday morning what Trump had announced.
âThe end of the world,â she said of the impact it would have on Cuba.
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reporters Andrea RodrĂguez in Havana and MarĂa Verza in Mexico City contributed.
Source: âAOL Moneyâ