By Malvika Nair
While the United States President Donald Trump continues his brazen threats against Iran, the latest being a naval blockade after several bombastic genocidal claims earlier this month of bombing the country to the stone ages and wiping its civilisation off, in another corner of the world, Cuba also finds itself at a particularly perilous geopolitical and economic juncture today. The Caribbean island nation, having endured imperialist aggression since the Fidel Castro-led revolution that overthrew the US-backed dictatorship in 1959, is currently facing a grave humanitarian crisis. Through an executive order signed by President Donald Trump in January, the US has effectively imposed a total fuel and financial blockade by threatening punitive tariffs on any country that supplies fuel to Cuba. This marks a significant escalation of the already debilitating decades-long economic embargo imposed by the US. Trump, and his Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, have been open about their intentions, stating several times that Cuba “will be failing pretty soon” while making thinly veiled threats that it might be too late for the country if a deal—implying, effectively speaking, capitulation—was not made very soon. Even in the midst of the ongoing war on Iran, Trump made his nefarious designs clear by claiming he would soon be able to “take Cuba” and do whatever he wished with it.
It is evident that the US intends to create the conditions for a total economic collapse in Cuba, which it hopes would lead to popular discontentment and eventually achieve its aims of toppling the communist regime. As an outcome of the illegal blockade being enforced by the financial and military might of the US, fuel supply had almost completely dried out on the island, with only one tanker being able to bring fuel to the country in over a hundred days’ time, causing long hours of blackout and affecting day-to-day life severely. The entire country was plunged in to darkness several times as the national grid collapsed in its entirety. Since the escalation in January, the Cuban government had already been forced to adopt emergency measures to ration its fuel consumption, including prioritising the supply of electricity to hospitals, primary schools and elderly care homes, shortening of the work week, scaling down public transportation significantly, heavily capping personal fuel purchases, amongst other such measures. Emergency services in most hospitals have also been hit hard. Shortages of food and medical supplies have become more widespread, while people are being forced to fall back on wood for cooking. Tourism, on which much of the country’s economy is dependent, is also heavily affected. Re-fueling for international carriers has been halted, while some of the key events that not only serve as symbols of national pride but also attract thousands of people from abroad each year, such as the Feria internacional del libro (International Book Fair) and the Festival del Habano (Cuban Cigar Festival), have had to be postponed, and a large number of resorts had to be closed during the peak of the tourist season, in order to conserve energy.
In the face of this impending humanitarian catastrophe, being engineered via what many call as a ‘genocidal blockade’ by those who have long sought the collapse of the communist government that has resisted Western imperialist designs, how would ordinary Cubans react to this latest attack on their country? If the events of January 2026, when this author spent nearly three weeks in the country, are anything to go by, despite the hardships, it is evident that the extraordinary resilience that the people of Cuba have shown for so long, still remains as strong as ever, and the US’ objectives of bringing them to their knees would not be easy to fulfill.
This January was not just tumultuous for Latin American politics, with the first-ever direct military intervention of the US on a South American country in its display of naked aggression while abducting Maduro, but also was hugely consequential for Cuba. The country has a special relationship with the Bolivarian regime in Venezuela, which is shaped by their shared political commitments and material needs. They signed an agreement in 2000, referred to as an “unprecedented solidarity compensation mechanism”, wherein Venezuela provides subsidised fuel in exchange for skilled Cuban manpower, in terms of healthcare, defense and scientific research. As part of this relationship, the Cuban government also provided security and intelligence personnel to Venezuela, thirty-two of whom were killed in the US raid to abduct Maduro in the Venezuelan capital this January. This is by far the highest number of Cuban casualties in a conflict with the US, since the failed Bay of Pigs invasion of 1961, signifying the scale of the costs for Cuba itself, and that could have potentially led to a pushback amongst the Cuban people, already besieged economically, against the regime whose current leadership led by President Miguel Díaz-Canel, from most accounts, lacks both the authority and the charisma wielded by the Castro brothers, Fidel and Raúl.
Yet, the popular response to these casualties clearly suggests rallying behind the ideals of the revolution, and in turn, behind the regime that is widely seen as the bearer of those ideals. On a rainy Thursday morning in mid-January, the island nation received the remains of the martyrs who lost their lives in Venezuela, and came together to pay their tributes. The remains were placed in the Ministry of Armed Forces building to allow the public to pay their final respects. It was an overcast day, with unrelenting rain, as if the skies too were joining in mourning with people braving the heavy downpour and turning up in tens of thousands, with the queue to enter the building over two kilometres long, and people waiting patiently for their turn, for long hours. Inside the building, the soldiers’ remains were placed with small placards with their names, next to which their photographs and medals were present. The mood was sombre, yet the conversations centred around belief in the cause of the revolution and how the struggle against US-imperialism in light of these latest events needs to be carried on.
The following day, the government organised hundreds of events, each referred to as the ‘Marcha del Pueblo Combatiente’, the March for the Fighting People, across the country, with many hundreds of thousands joining them. The march in Havana originated at the José Marti statue, one of the most powerful figures from the Cuban liberation struggle and a tall figure among Latin American intellectuals, on the historic Plaza de la Dignidad that oversees the US embassy in Havana, and which has served as a powerful venue for protests decrying American intervention in recent decades. That morning, the resolve to defend sovereignty at any cost was evident, with the air filled with slogans of ‘Glory and Honor’, in tribute to the martyrs. People carried the Cuban and Venezuelan flags, posters of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, placards decrying US imperialism, asserting Cuban sovereignty and celebrating the revolution, while calling for the release of Maduro, alongside expressing unflinching solidarity with the Palestinian cause. Young kids perched on their parents’ shoulders, waving the Cuban flag, marching together with those from the generation that participated in the revolution in the 1950s, including Raúl Castro himself, walking on, along the Malecón seafront, the waters that geographically separate Cuba from the US, with impassioned chants such as “Patria o Muerte, venceremos!” (Nation or Death, we will be victorious!), “Viva Fidel!”, “Viva Maduro!” (Long Live) and “Abajo al imperialismo yanqui!” (Down to Yankee imperialism) reverberating in the air, served as a powerful setting to symbolise the unity of the Cuban people against the Donroe doctrine’s machinations for achieving unchallenged hemispheric hegemony.
Even before this latest tightening of the blockade, Cuba was suffering from severe fuel and food shortages. Everyday life being upended by long blackouts, amounting to as high as 14 to 16 hours, even in the capital city of Havana, had been a common occurrence. Routine activities such as cooking and storing food, using mobile phones and laptops, accessing the internet, and other life-sustaining activities became severely affected – a thinly-veiled assault on the very dignity of the people. Private electricity generators remain out of reach for most Cuban families. With the fuel crisis, public transport was also completely disrupted. People were forced to walk long hours to their workplaces, and the working hours of offices, shops, and markets are irregular. Making an already volatile situation even worse, the Cuban currency has been rapidly getting devalued, making the purchase of everyday supplies much more difficult than it already was. For instance, while a pack of a dozen eggs cost upwards of 2 USD, the average monthly salary of Cubans is only a few times higher than that, equivalent to approximately 12-15 USD, much less than even a one-way cab fare from central Havana to the airport, suggesting how suffocating the all-encompassing sanctions to the ordinary Cubans.
Surely, everything is more difficult now – “Está complicado, no es fácil” (It is complicated, things are not easy), is amongst the most frequently resorted to responses, from many with whom this author interacted. But it is also palpable that there is an urgent need to defend what the Cubans had dared to dream, and they seek to do it with dignity, conviction, and a great deal of resilience. It is not very clear at the moment when the present political and economic siege of Cuba will end, but people understand that even in these unprecedented times, it is important to continue to lead their lives, carrying forward the spirit of the Cuban revolution.
Through many decades, under the harsh US sanctions, Cuba did not let the legacy of the Revolution and its internationalist spirit get extinguished. It sent its soldiers to fight in national liberation and anti-imperialist struggles in Angola, South Africa, Congo, and Vietnam, while also dispatching medical brigades all over the world, developing indigenous vaccines, including vaccines against Covid-19 and lung cancer. At this hour, as the US seeks to choke the island into submission, it is crucial that the rest of the world stands in solidarity with the Cuban people’s struggle against Western imperialism, and in defense of their sovereignty and undertake efforts to break this stifling siege of the island.
Malvika Nair is pursuing a PhD in Hispanic Studies, at the University of Warwick (UK), where her thesis looks at the representation of race and caste through Cuban and Indian poetry, respectively.
14 April 2026
Source: countercurrents.org