President Donald Trump is not preparing to “take” Cuba through force. Instead, his administration’s tightening of sanctions and restrictions on critical energy supplies is squeezing an already fragile nation into deeper humanitarian distress. By obstructing oil imports and intensifying economic isolation, these policies have helped trigger widespread blackouts, fuel shortages, and breakdowns in basic services that ordinary families rely on to survive.
This is not abstract geopolitics. It is lived suffering. Hospitals without reliable power. Food and medicine harder to obtain. Parents unable to secure essentials for their children. Whatever one’s views on the Cuban government, it is indefensible to pursue a policy that so clearly punishes civilians more than leaders.
Sanctions can be a tool of leverage when they are precise and paired with diplomatic off-ramps. What we are witnessing instead is collective hardship imposed without a credible path toward constructive change. If the intent is to promote freedom and dignity, a policy that deepens poverty and desperation achieves the opposite.
America’s moral authority has long rested not only on its strength, but on its humanity. We should be deeply troubled when our actions abroad erode that foundation.