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Cuba Dispatch
7MAY

GL 134B expires; Universal stuck offshore

4 min read
12:16UTC

OFAC let General Licence 134B lapse on 16 May without a Cuba-specific successor, leaving the Sovcomflot Universal's 270,000 barrels of diesel outside any US authorisation envelope.

PoliticsAssessed
Key takeaway

GL 134B's 16 May expiry leaves 270,000 barrels of Russian diesel outside any US licence.

General Licence 134B lapsed at midnight Washington time on Saturday 16 May. The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC, the US Treasury sanctions administrator) issued no GL 134C and no Cuba-specific tanker general licence under the new Executive Order 14404. The Sovcomflot Universal, a 50,923 DWT Russian state tanker carrying 270,000 barrels of diesel, last broadcast on AIS (Automatic Identification System) on 29 April at 2.2 knots west-south-west, roughly 1,000 to 1,600 kilometres from Cuba.

Baker McKenzie's 16 May sanctions analysis confirmed what the licence text already stated: GL 134B is a Russia-programme wind-down instrument, and its operative language explicitly excludes from authorisation "transactions involving persons located in, or organised under the laws of...Cuba". OFAC has carried that exclusion clause in the licence since first issuance . The vessel has therefore never had a lawful Cuba unloading window, even before it ran out of time.

Lowdown logged the Universal as adrift on 5 May ; the 16 May expiry hardened that drift into legal limbo. Cuba General License 1, OFAC's 7 May savings clause under EO 14404, attaches the new order to the existing Cuban Assets Control Regulations (CACR, the modern US embargo framework). The savings clause adds no Cuba fuel-delivery permission. Treasury's absence of a GL 134C reads as policy by omission: the agency keeps the carrying costs on Sovcomflot and on the wider Russian shadow fleet without having to interdict, enforce, or extend.

For Havana, the practical effect is that the vessel announced as the successor to the depleted Anatoly Kolodkin cargo is the same vessel Washington has barred from discharge. Any unloading attempt now exposes every payment intermediary, insurer and downstream buyer of subsequent Sovcomflot cargoes to the EO 14404 secondary-sanctions perimeter.

OFAC's silence has now authored the Universal's status more decisively than any deadline did.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A **General License** is a permission slip the **US Treasury Department** issues so that businesses can do specific things that would otherwise be blocked by sanctions. **General License 134B** was the slip that let one Russian-owned oil tanker called the **Universal** keep sailing towards Cuba with a load of diesel. It expired on 16 May with no replacement. The tricky bit: the original slip said the cargo could not actually be sold to anyone organised under Cuban law. So the tanker was always sailing under a permission to move, not a permission to deliver. With the slip now expired, the diesel sits in legal no-man's-land. The captain has to either turn around, sell to someone outside Cuba, or take a deep discount to find a buyer who can absorb the sanctions risk.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Cuba carve-out in GL 134B was deliberate drafting from the start. **OFAC**'s Russia-sanctions architecture has always treated Cuba transactions as a separate jurisdictional gate, governed by the **Cuban Assets Control Regulations** (1963) rather than the Russia-specific Executive Orders.

When **EO 14404** layered new Cuba prohibitions on top in May, Treasury faced a drafting choice: extend GL 134B with a Cuba inclusion, or let the carve-out's pre-existing exclusion do the work. Treasury under **Scott Bessent** chose the latter on 17 April.

The second structural cause sits at the carrier level: **Sovcomflot** has been a Treasury-blocked entity since February 2024, so any cargo it carries already requires affirmative licensing rather than absence of prohibition. The Universal was sailing under a narrow window: GL 134B's wind-down covered the carrier, never the destination.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Sovcomflot will likely divert the Universal to a non-Cuban Caribbean port (Puerto Cabello or a Venezuelan transhipment point) within 14 days, or accept a structured sale at 25-40% discount to a third-flag buyer.

    Short term · 0.65
  • Precedent

    Non-renewal of a Russia wind-down licence specifically because of a Cuba intersection establishes that OFAC will use jurisdictional gaps as a deniable sanctions tool, requiring no fresh designation.

    Medium term · 0.75
  • Risk

    If Treasury enforces, every future Sovcomflot deal involving Cuba-bound cargo becomes commercially uninsurable outside Russian state cover, accelerating the shadow-fleet shift to chartered non-Russian-flagged carriers.

    Medium term · 0.7
First Reported In

Update #4 · Diesel adrift, grid splits, Rubio at Vatican

US Treasury OFAC· 18 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
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.
United States (Mike Waltz / OFAC)
United States (Mike Waltz / OFAC)
Ambassador Mike Waltz held up photographs of named Cuban political prisoners, including Otero Alcántara, telling the delegation "this is not Havana", while OFAC issued no new Cuba designation between 1 and 9 July. Washington is running the prisoner-naming track and the sanctions track separately, and a re-charged Otero Alcántara would give the naming track a fresh case to press.
Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MINREX)
Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MINREX)
MINREX rebutted Mike Waltz's prisoner photographs at the UNGA debate, saying Cuba has nothing resembling the repression imagery Washington displayed, while giving no public account of Otero Alcántara's whereabouts. Havana's embargo case depends on external sanctions as the sole cause of harm, which a domestically caused grid failure and an unexplained disappearance both complicate.
Russia and China
Russia and China
Moscow and Beijing offered rhetorical solidarity but no relief. No Russian tanker has reached Cuba since the Sovcomflot Universal diverted on 26 May, and China has moved no substitute cargo, leaving Havana's fuel siege unbroken by its strategic partners.