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Cuba Dispatch
17JUL

Havana's UN week turns against it

2 min read
14:00UTC

Stavros Lambrinidis told the UN General Assembly the embargo harms Cubans, then faulted Havana's Ukraine-ceasefire vote; a day later Mike Waltz held up photographs of named Cuban political prisoners.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Cuba won its embargo platform at the UN but lost control of what was said on it.

The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) held its annual debate on the US embargo on Tuesday 7 July, a session Cuba requests each year. Speaking for the European Union, Ambassador Stavros Lambrinidis acknowledged the embargo's humanitarian harm, then criticised Cuba's vote against a Ukraine ceasefire resolution and urged Havana to end Cuban participation in Russian military forces, a thread Lowdown tracks in its Russia-Ukraine coverage. The EU restated that its own law forbids it from implementing Helms-Burton, the 1996 US act, and announced no new measures 1.

The next day the US ambassador, Mike Waltz, held up photographs of named Cuban political prisoners, Otero Alcántara among them, and told the Cuban delegation "this is not Havana" 2. Washington had already placed President Miguel Díaz-Canel himself on the OFAC sanctions list in June , so the rostrum naming continued a personal-designation track rather than opening a new one. Cuba's foreign ministry, the Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores (MINREX), rebutted that the island has nothing resembling the repression imagery on display in the United States.

Havana convened the session to prosecute the embargo, and did so in the same 48 hours that its grid fell over completely and its best-known prisoner disappeared one day before his sentence ran out. The European Parliament had already voted 283 to 199 for Magnitsky sanctions on Díaz-Canel in June ; the EU Council took no action on that vote , and nothing this week moved it. Waltz's photographs gave the prisoner cases a rostrum; Brussels offered Havana criticism without the sanctions its own Parliament had demanded.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Every year the United Nations General Assembly holds a debate and vote on the decades-long US trade embargo against Cuba, which almost every country condemns. In 2026 the debate fell on 7-8 July. The European Union's representative, Stavros Lambrinidis, criticised the embargo's harm to ordinary Cubans but also criticised Cuba for how it voted on the Ukraine war and for allowing Russian troops on the island, without announcing any new EU action either way. The US representative, Mike Waltz, held up photographs of named Cuban political prisoners, including Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara, to argue the embargo is a human-rights tool as much as a trade dispute.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The EU's Cuba position is constrained by the 2016 Political Dialogue and Cooperation Agreement, which several member states (notably Spain) treat as the operative framework and are reluctant to unwind absent a qualified majority, meaning Lambrinidis's floor criticism carries no binding weight without a separate Council vote the European Parliament's June resolution does not itself compel.

Washington's position rests on the codified Helms-Burton and Torricelli Act framework, which requires congressional action, not executive discretion, to lift, so US officials can escalate rhetoric (naming individual prisoners) without any corresponding policy change being available to them either.

Escalation

No escalation on either side: the EU announced no new measures despite its criticism, and the US repeated its existing prisoner-focused framing rather than proposing fresh sanctions.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The EU's willingness to publicly criticise Cuba's Russia alignment without matching action suggests Brussels is managing two separate files, human rights and geopolitics, that have not yet merged into a single Cuba policy.

First Reported In

Update #10 · Cuba's dark UN week, a prisoner vanishes

European External Action Service· 9 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Human rights monitors (OCDH and Prisoners Defenders)
Human rights monitors (OCDH and Prisoners Defenders)
OCDH's 14 July dictamen named the specific offices responsible for holding Otero Alcántara past his sentence-expiry date; Prisoners Defenders counted 1,306 political prisoners, including 40 detained minors, on 9 July. Both oppose the Cuban government's account without endorsing Washington's sanctions instrument as a remedy.
US State Department
US State Department
Secretary Rubio said Cuba 'continues to ally itself with America's enemies' and framed the 13 July designations as deploying 'every tool at our disposal', now citing forced-labour export to Angola for the first time. These quotes rest on cached web snippets; state.gov was unreachable this run and could not be directly verified.
Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla called the 13 July designation package 'criminal and genocidal' and said 'Cuba is not a threat and US intelligence agencies know it'. State media frame the 16 July gas-price rise as a direct consequence of the intensifying blockade, though Havana has not disclosed its own container-import shift dated 3 July.
Russia
Russia
Moscow has sent Havana solidarity gestures, including birthday messages to Raúl Castro, but no tanker has reached Cuba since the Sovcomflot Universal diverted away in May, and none arrived this week either. Russia's backing remains rhetorical while the fuel gap CUPET's designation created stays unfilled from any state-to-state source.
Observatorio Cubano de Derechos Humanos (OCDH)
Observatorio Cubano de Derechos Humanos (OCDH)
The Madrid-based monitor published its half-year count of 1,949 repressive actions on 7 July, 299 in June, the highest monthly total it has logged in 2026, with independent journalists the most-targeted group. OCDH's figures moved the debate from sanctions cadence to security-state conduct in the same week Havana wanted the argument to stay on sanctions.
European Union (Stavros Lambrinidis)
European Union (Stavros Lambrinidis)
Lambrinidis told the UNGA the embargo harms ordinary Cubans, then criticised Havana's Ukraine-ceasefire vote and Russian military participation, announcing no new measures. The EU is managing two separate Cuba files, human rights and Cuba's Russia alignment, that have not yet merged into one policy with teeth.