ANALYSISApril 13, 2026
Should the US embargo against Cuba end?
The United States embargo against Cuba, in place since February 1962, remains a subject of active international and domestic debate. The Trump administration (2025–present) has tightened sanctions, reversed a brief Biden-era easing, and maintained Cuba's State Sponsor of Terrorism designation, while the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution for the 33rd consecutive year calling for the embargo's end. Congressional legislation has been introduced both to repeal the embargo and to further entrench it.
After six decades, the US embargo hasn't toppled the Castro regime or freed the Cuban people — so is it a principled stand against communism or the world's longest-running failed experiment in coercive diplomacy?
Not familiar with this story? Get context →
553 prisoners: leverage vs. engagement
C
The Obama opening didn't liberalize Cuba — the Cuban security apparatus consolidated power and pocketed tourism revenue, and the July 2021 protests were met with 1,000 imprisonments after years of that engagement. Economic opening without conditions doesn't produce political reform; it produces a better-funded regime.
L
You cite 2021 as engagement's failure, but the January 2025 Catholic Church-brokered deal — a direct product of engagement diplomacy — freed 553 named political prisoners. That is a concrete, verified human rights outcome. The embargo's 63 years produced nothing comparable.
C
Those 553 releases came through conditional, third-party-verified pressure — exactly the leverage framework conservatives are arguing for. The regime reversed course the moment unconditional relief appeared imminent, which proves the lesson is 'leverage works,' not 'engagement works.'
L
If your argument is that conditioned engagement freed 553 people, we agree — so the debate is about design, not whether to engage at all, and a blanket embargo is the one tool that forecloses that design entirely.
Regime capture of economic gains
C
The liberal case assumes economic liberalization transmits into political liberalization, but Cuba's Leninist party-state is structurally designed to prevent exactly that. China and Vietnam are the precedent: economic opening enriched party elites and entrenched the apparatus, it didn't democratize governance.
L
The regime-capture risk is real — I won't pretend otherwise. But you're using it as an argument against engagement when it's actually an argument about the design of engagement. Remittances routed through civil society rather than state enterprises, mineral-access agreements tied to prisoner releases — these tools deny the regime the ability to simply pocket gains.
C
Describing the right design is easy; enforcing it against a Leninist security state is the actual problem. Cuba has spent 63 years demonstrating it can absorb pressure and manipulate diplomatic cycles for strategic benefit — why would compliance mechanisms survive contact with that apparatus?
L
Because we have a data point: conditional Church-brokered diplomacy produced 553 releases. The enforcement problem is real, but it's not hypothetical in the way 63 years of embargo failure is.
Helms-Burton codification as strategic choice
C
The Helms-Burton Act wasn't arbitrary rigidity — Congress codified the embargo specifically because presidential oscillation between Kennedy and every successor gave Havana a strategic advantage, letting the regime play diplomatic cycles for political benefit. Legal entrenchment removed that leverage from Havana.
L
You're describing Helms-Burton as removing Havana's leverage, but what it actually removed was Washington's flexibility. No other U.S. sanction against any adversary — not Iran, not North Korea, not Russia — is so legally locked that a president cannot adjust it without an act of Congress. That's not strategic discipline, that's policy calcification.
C
Iran, North Korea, and Russia are all subject to extensive congressional sanctions frameworks precisely because executive flexibility proved exploitable — the difference is that Cuba's proximity and the regime's durability made statutory entrenchment the more defensible choice, not an anomaly.
L
Those frameworks still preserve presidential waiver authority as a negotiating tool; Helms-Burton eliminated it entirely, which is why Trump could reverse Biden's executive actions on day one and the 553 prisoners went back to uncertainty.
China and Russia strategic entrenchment
C
Cuba holds the world's third-largest cobalt reserves and critical nickel deposits, and China and Russia are actively competing for influence over an island 90 miles from Florida. Lifting the embargo without verified political concessions hands Beijing and Moscow an economic foothold and a propaganda victory simultaneously.
L
The strategic incoherence runs the other direction: by maintaining the embargo, we are actively ceding that cobalt and nickel access to China and Russia right now. Keeping the embargo in place doesn't prevent their entrenchment — it accelerates it, because we've removed ourselves from the competition entirely.
C
Entering that competition unconditionally is worse than staying out of it — we would be legitimizing the regime, funding its security apparatus, and getting outcompeted by Beijing anyway, since Chinese state enterprises can absorb political risk that American firms legally cannot.
L
Then structure the mineral agreements with human rights benchmarks, as I've argued throughout — but 'we might lose the competition' is not a reason to forfeit it before it starts.
63-year failure demands honest justification
C
The honest conservative answer is not that the embargo will eventually work — it probably won't, on its own. The honest answer is that unilateral lifting without conditioning relief on verifiable benchmarks would be a strategic and moral concession to one of the hemisphere's most durable authoritarian systems at exactly the moment China and Russia want that access.
L
That's a significant concession — you're acknowledging the embargo won't work. But then you're defending it as a moral stance rather than a strategy, which is precisely what I mean by ritual. A policy justified by what it refuses to do rather than what it achieves is not policy, it's symbolism.
C
Refusing to hand an authoritarian regime unconditional economic relief isn't symbolism — it's a floor. The question is whether you negotiate from that floor with conditions or abandon it entirely, and 'the embargo hasn't worked' is not an argument for the latter.
L
No one is arguing for unconditional lifting — the liberal case has been conditioned engagement throughout. You're defending the floor as if the only alternative is the ceiling, when the entire argument is about what's built between them.
Conservative's hardest question
The 63-year duration of the embargo without achieving regime change is genuinely difficult to dismiss — a policy that has not produced its stated outcome in six decades requires something stronger than inertia as justification. The honest burden on the pro-embargo side is to specify what verifiable conditions would ever be sufficient to lift it, or concede that it has become symbolic rather than strategic.
Liberal's hardest question
The Cuban government's imprisonment of more than 1,000 protesters following the July 2021 uprising demonstrates a regime willing to absorb catastrophic domestic suffering rather than liberalize, which gives serious credibility to the argument that any economic opening would be captured by party elites rather than benefit ordinary Cubans or produce political reform. This is not a hypothetical risk — it describes the actual behavior of this government under pressure.
Both sides agree: Both sides agree that the embargo has failed to produce political liberalization or regime change in Cuba across 63 years, and neither defends it as a policy succeeding on its original terms.
The real conflict: The sides disagree on a factual-causal question: whether the Obama-era engagement produced meaningful human rights progress (the liberal points to 553 prisoners freed in 2025 as proof of concept) or whether that outcome merely demonstrates that targeted leverage works and therefore vindicates conditionality rather than broad engagement (the conservative interpretation of the same event).
What nobody has answered: If both sides agree that conditionality and leverage produce better outcomes than either blanket embargo or unconditional engagement, why has neither the U.S. government nor its critics produced a specific, binding, enforceable conditionality framework — and what does the absence of that framework reveal about whether this debate is actually about Cuba policy or about domestic political identity?
Sources
- UN General Assembly vote records on Cuba embargo resolution (2024), 165-7 result
- U.S. State Department Cuba State Sponsor of Terrorism designation history
- Helms-Burton Act legislative text and history (1996)
- Biden executive actions on Cuba, January 14, 2025
- Trump administration Cuba policy directives, January 20, 2025 and July 2025
- Cato Institute commentary by Daniel Griswold on Cuba embargo economic costs
- U.S. agricultural export data to Cuba (2024, exceeding $370 million)
- Congressional legislation S. 136 (repeal embargo) and H.R. 450 (restrict terrorism delisting)
- UN Ambassador Mike Waltz statements on Cuba UN resolution
- Marco Rubio Senate confirmation hearing statements on Cuba terrorism designation