Donald Trump signed a new Cuba sanctions executive order on Friday 1 May 2026, authorising asset-blocking, entry suspension and correspondent-account restrictions against Cuban government officials, security and defence sector personnel, and their adult family members 1 2. The order is structurally distinct from EO 14380 , which Trump signed on 29 January and which targeted oil flows through secondary tariffs. Where the January instrument worked through commodity chains, the 1 May order names categories of natural persons.
OFAC (the US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control) has not yet published any designations under the new framework. The order exists without targets. Once the first SDN (Specially Designated Nationals) list appears, US-held property freezes, US visas suspend, and any foreign bank running correspondent-account business through New York carries an enforcement risk on the named person's transactions.
Most US sanctions programmes reach relatives only through derivative-property findings against the principal: a wife's house gets blocked because the husband paid for it with sanctioned funds. Designating adult sons, daughters and spouses in their own right, by category and without specific conduct, follows the pattern OFAC has used against Russia and Belarus rather than the hemispheric template. The 1 May order is the first time a Cuba-specific instrument has reached relatives that way. Adult children of GAESA officers studying in Madrid or holding bank accounts in Mexico City lose practical access to dollar-denominated channels regardless of their own conduct.
Havana answered same-day rather than waiting for state-media synthesis. President Miguel Díaz-Canel called the order "coercive" and Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla called it "collective punishment" violating the UN Charter, the same framing the ministry had deployed on 14 April . Beneath the visible escalation, the dual-track diplomatic contacts opened on 10 April , have not been disavowed. The 1 May signature timed to Cuba's Labour Day pairs a regulatory instrument with a Cuban political date for the second time in four months: EO 14380 was signed on the eve of the José Martí birthday observances. Trump's signing schedule is now treating Cuban political holidays as the framing surface.
