Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Cuba Dispatch
17JUL

Parliament votes, EU Council does not

2 min read
14:00UTC

The European Parliament voted 283-199 for Magnitsky sanctions on Díaz-Canel, but the EU Council has opened no track and Spain's Albares hosted Cuba's deputy PM in Madrid.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

The European Parliament voted for Cuba sanctions, but the Council has not acted and Spain holds a veto.

The European Council, the only EU body that can impose restrictive measures, has opened no sanctions track against Cuba, three weeks after the European Parliament voted 283-199 on 18 June for Magnitsky-style sanctions against Miguel Díaz-Canel and suspension of the EU-Cuba cooperation agreement . Magnitsky measures are a framework for freezing the assets and barring the travel of named human-rights abusers. A Parliament resolution does not bind the Council.

In the same month Spain's foreign minister José Manuel Albares received Cuba's deputy prime minister Óscar Pérez-Oliva in Madrid, with Spanish diplomacy focused on shielding the hotel groups Meliá and Iberostar from US sanctions 1. Kaja Kallas, the EU's foreign-policy chief, called the cooperation agreement a failure, yet Spain holds an effective veto over any Cuba measure.

The EU's own Blocking Statute, which refuses to recognise US extraterritorial sanctions, sits awkwardly beside its Parliament's vote to impose sanctions of its own. Madrid's commercial stake in Cuban tourism, the exposure the Supreme Court has now enlarged for its flagship operators, is the reason the split holds.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The European Union has two bodies that matter here. The European Parliament, made up of directly elected MEPs, voted heavily in favour of sanctioning Cuba's president and freezing a cooperation deal. But the Parliament cannot actually impose sanctions; only the European Council, made up of the EU's 27 national governments acting together, can do that. Spain has commercial reasons to prefer a softer approach, since its hotel companies Meliá and Iberostar operate in Cuba, and any one of the 27 governments can block Council action. So the Parliament voted for tougher measures, and nothing has happened since, because the body that could act has not moved.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The EU's Common Foreign and Security Policy requires unanimity among all 27 member states for restrictive measures, a rule written to prevent any single foreign policy from being imposed on a reluctant member, which now means any one state can block Cuba sanctions regardless of how the directly elected Parliament votes.

Spain's veto-equivalent leverage is not written into any Cuba-specific rule; it follows from the same unanimity requirement that applies to every CFSP sanctions decision, made politically consequential here because Spain, not some smaller member state, happens to be the one with commercial exposure through Meliá and Iberostar.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Díaz-Canel and GAESA leadership face no new EU asset freezes or travel bans unless the Council itself opens a restrictive-measures track, which the Parliament's vote cannot force.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Spain's commercial exposure through Meliá and Iberostar gives it a standing incentive to withhold the unanimity any future Council sanctions proposal would need.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Meaning

    The split between Parliament and Council mirrors the EU's own Blocking Statute posture, which refuses to recognise extraterritorial US sanctions while the bloc struggles to agree its own.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #9 · Cuba's dollar reform, no bank to clear it

Infobae· 1 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.