Tuesday, March 31, 2026


 

Russian tanker bypasses US oil blockade of Cuba

President Trump said the vessel, carrying 100,000 tons of crude, was allowed through on humanitarian grounds

Published 30 Mar, 2026 | Updated 31 Mar, 2026, Russia Today

 Russian oil tanker Anatoly Kolodkin docks at Cuban port of Matanzas 

A Russian tanker has arrived in Cuba to deliver a humanitarian oil shipment amid a months-long US blockade that has led to severe fuel shortages and recurring power cuts across the island.

Russia’s Energy Ministry reported that the Anatoly Kolodkin, carrying 100,000 tons of crude oil, has docked at the port of Matanzas and now waits to be unloaded.

Despite US Coast Guard ships being present in the region, “the Trump administration did not order those vessels to act,” an official familiar with the matter told the New York Times.

“Barring orders instructing it otherwise, the Coast Guard planned to let the tanker reach Cuba as of Sunday afternoon,” the source added, speaking on condition of anonymity.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened tariffs on countries exporting fuel to Cuba. However, speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One on Sunday, he confirmed that Washington had allowed the Russian tanker through on humanitarian grounds.

Russian oil tanker Anatoly Kolodkin docks at Cuban port of Matanzas © RT

“We don’t mind having somebody get a boat load because they need to survive,” he said. “I’d prefer letting it in, whether it’s Russia or anybody else, because the people need heat and cooling.”

Trump, however, added that he still expects Havana to “fail soon,” saying the US would be there to “help it out.”

The Caribbean nation has faced severe fuel shortages and power cuts in recent months after Venezuela, once Havana’s closest ally, halted oil shipments following pressure from Washington.

Multiple international fuel deliveries have been disrupted, vessels linked to Havana have struggled to secure supplies, and some have been turned away or intercepted – with at least one escorted away from Cuban waters, according to ship-tracking data.

Earlier this month, Havana agreed to enter talks with Washington in a bid to defuse tensions and avert a humanitarian crisis. Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel confirmed that negotiations were ongoing and aimed at “finding solutions through dialogue to the bilateral differences we have between the two nations.”

Trump, however, has not abandoned his stated intention to take over the island “one way or another.” On Friday, he said Cuba could be “next” following what he described as successful US military operations in Venezuela and Iran.

_________________________________________

Russian oil tanker arrives in Cuba as Moscow vows to stand by Havana

By Vladimir Soldatkin and Dmitry Antonov

March 30, 2026

 

MOSCOW, March 30 (Reuters) - Russia said on Monday that an oil tanker carrying 100,000 metric tons of crude oil had arrived in Cuba and that Moscow would stand by its friends by working on further supplies despite a U.S. blockade of the Communist-run island.

 

The U.S. cut off Venezuela's oil exports to Cuba after toppling Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on January 3, and U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to slap punishing tariffs on any other country that sent crude to Cuba. But Trump on Sunday signaled he was reversing course and expressed sympathy for the Cuban people's need for energy.

 

The Anatoly Kolodkin was waiting to offload at the port of Matanzas, Russia's transport ministry said. The Kremlin said it had raised the issue of the tanker during talks with the U.S. but that Russia felt ‌it had a duty to support "friends" in Cuba. "This issue was indeed raised in advance during contacts with our American partners," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

 

Cuba has not received an oil tanker in three months, according to President Miguel Diaz-Canel, and its energy crisis has caused blackouts across the country of 10 million. Health officials say the crisis has increased the mortality risk for cancer patients, especially children.

 

Cuba became dependent on the Soviet Union for oil after its communist revolution in 1959, and needs imported fuel oil and diesel to generate power.  Asked if further Russian shipments would follow, Peskov said: "In the desperate situation that Cubans now find themselves in, this, of course, cannot leave us indifferent, so we will continue to work on this."  LSEG ship-tracking data showed the Russian tanker had left the Russian Baltic Sea port of Primorsk on March 8 and was now moving along Cuba's northern shore.


Saturday, March 28, 2026

 Russian Energy Minister Confirms Oil Shipments to Cuba

The Moscow Times, March 25, 2026

Energy Minister Sergei Tsivilev confirmed Wednesday that Russia is sending “humanitarian” shipments of oil to Cuba after ship-tracking data earlier appeared to show that at least one tanker had unloaded Russian crude in Havana.

Cuba, which imports around 60% of its energy supply, previously relied on oil sold by Venezuela. Those shipments ended after then-President Nicolás Maduro was captured in a U.S. military raid.

An energy embargo imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump to bring pressure for a change in the island’s political system has compounded years of deep economic crisis and led to more frequent blackouts across the Caribbean nation.

“We are sending humanitarian aid. We are providing humanitarian support,” Tsivilev told reporters.

“Cuba has found itself in a difficult situation as a result of sanctions pressure. That is why we are currently sending humanitarian supplies to Cuba,” he added.

The Financial Times reported last week that a Russian tanker delivered gasoline to the island earlier this month. In response to that reported shipment, the U.S. Treasury Department amended a sanctions waiver for Russian oil tankers, barring transactions that include Cuba.

Several aid vessels carrying solar panels, bicycles, food and medicine have also been dispatched to Cuba in recent days. Those humanitarian deliveries have been organized by groups of politicians, activists and other public figures from dozens of countries.

Trump has said that he is prepared to “take” Cuba. Authorities from both countries acknowledged that they are holding talks, although they have not disclosed details. Amid the U.S. pressure campaign, the Kremlin has reaffirmed its support for Cuba and has expressed concern over the growing humanitarian crisis on the island.

Will the U.S. stop it? 
Russian tanker with desperately needed oil closes in on Cuba 

By Antonio María Delgado, Miami Herald 
March 25, 2026 

A Russian oil tanker carrying hundreds of thousands of barrels of crude is steadily approaching Cuba, setting up a high-stakes test of Washington’s willingness to enforce its tightening energy embargo on the island as it grapples with a deepening fuel crisis. Jorge Piñón, an energy expert at the University of Texas at Austin, said the vessel — the Anatoly Kolodkin — appears to be maintaining a steady course toward Cuba. “This morning—when I checked it; I hadn't checked it just now—it was en route to Cuba. It is maintaining a speed of roughly 12 knots,” Piñón said. “I imagine it should arrive sometime within the next six days. However, for the moment, it hasn’t changed either its direction or its speed.” 

Ferrying an estimated 700,000 to 730,000 barrels of Russian crude across the Atlantic, the tanker is widely believed by analysts to be heading for the Cuban port of Matanzas, despite broadcasting a misleading destination. Its approach comes at a moment of heightened geopolitical tension, as the United States seeks to tighten pressure on Havana while managing global energy disruptions triggered by conflict in Iran and ongoing confrontations with Russia. 

Looming decision for Washington 
The tanker’s expected arrival is emerging as a key test of U.S. policy toward Cuba under President Donald Trump, whose administration has effectively imposed a de facto oil embargo on the island. In a move underscoring that stance, the U.S. Treasury Department last week amended a temporary waiver allowing certain sales of sanctioned Russian oil to explicitly exclude shipments to Cuba, as well as Iran and North Korea. 

That leaves open a central question: What will the United States do if the tanker presses ahead? 
“Here, anyone can say whatever they want, but at the end of the day, what we really have to watch for is what actually happens when that time comes,” Piñón said. “Are they going to board it? Are they going to stop it? Are they going to fire a cannon shot at it? What exactly are they going to do?”  U.S. officials have not publicly outlined their response, but analysts say options could range from diplomatic pressure to maritime interception by the U.S. Navy or Coast Guard, which maintain a strong presence in the Caribbean. 

Cuba’s worsening energy crisis 
The potential delivery comes as Cuba faces one of its most severe energy shortages in years. The island has received only two oil tankers so far this year, contributing to chronic power outages that have become a daily occurrence. The situation worsened further when another tanker originally bound for Cuba diverted to Trinidad and Tobago, depriving the island of a much-needed shipment. Russia has described its support as humanitarian. Energy Minister Sergei Tsivilev said Wednesday that Moscow is supplying fuel to Cuba as aid, though he did not provide details. If delivered, the crude could provide only temporary relief. Cuba’s aging refineries would need roughly two to three weeks to process the oil into usable fuels such as diesel, Piñón said. 

Broader geopolitical signal 
A second vessel, the Hong Kong-flagged SeaHorse, has added to the uncertainty. The tanker, believed to be carrying about 190,000 barrels of Russian diesel, spent weeks drifting in the Atlantic before diverting toward Venezuela, according to tracking data. Analysts say its unusual movements — including disabling its tracking signal — are consistent with tactics used to evade sanctions. For many observers, however, the significance of the Kolodkin goes beyond the fuel it carries. Russia’s move is widely seen as a geopolitical signal — a way to test Washington’s resolve in the Western Hemisphere at a time when the United States is already managing conflicts involving Ukraine and Iran. Whether the tanker is allowed to dock, turned away or intercepted at sea could shape not only Cuba’s immediate energy outlook, but also the broader balance of power playing out across the region. For now, Piñón said, the focus remains on the ship’s steady advance — and the uncertainty that lies ahead. “It hasn’t changed either its direction or its speed,” he said. “Now we wait to see what happens.”



Wednesday, March 25, 2026

 

Solidarity with Cuba from many quarters

From various parts of the Americas, expressions of solidarity with Cuba are pouring in, taking the form of material aid and a brotherly embrace

Saturday, March 21, 2026

 The ethical imperative of health in Cuba in the face of the energy siege.

Despite this siege, the Cuban health system has not collapsed, responding with a strategic reorganization based on resilience, the strengthening of primary care and the use of tools such as telemedicine...

 

March 10, 2026, México Herald (El Heraldo de México )

 

 Author: Dr. José Angel Portal Miranda, Minister of Public Health, Cuba.

Guest Column

Picture, El Heraldo de México  

In the complex scenario of contemporary geopolitics, economic figures tend to camouflage the real human impact that underlies the decisions of governments to achieve obscure political and economic objectives of domination in their relations with other countries, which on many occasions put lives at risk.

Irrefutable proof of this reality are the tools that the United States Government uses in a desperate and cruel manner against Cuba, and that increasingly increase the risks and threats to the lives of our people.

What has been historically for my country a economic, commercial and financial blockade for more than six decades, has recently mutated towards a qualitatively different phase which is even more quantitatively aggressive and inhumane: energy asphyxiation under false pretences. Cuba suffers a continuation of coercive unilateral measures that have a enormous extraterritorial impact in its relations with all countries and confronts a systemic blockade designed surgically to cause shortages capable of hurt and revert the social development of our nation and the quality of live of our population for destabilizing purposes.  

The unjust inclusion of Cuba in the US list of countries alleged sponsors of terrorism, adds to the persecution of commercial contracts of Cuba with countries and firms to obtain fuel; the harassment, interception and confiscation of ships carrying fuel, as well as threats of sanctions -and in other cases their effective application against shipping companies, have generated even greater pressure on our country transcending the economic to place itself in the field of basic human security.

In the health sector, this reality translates into a permanent objective tension: the National Health System depends on a continuous supply of electricity and logistics that are currently severely hampered.

The impact of the U.S. policy of maximum pressure against Cuba is starkly revealed in the most sensitive indicators.

Behind the numbers there are patients who suffer and families who wait for solutions that are sometimes delayed, or do not arrive, due to external factors that are the result of this progressive policy of strangulation of the Cuban economy by the Government of the United States.

Currently, the surgical waiting list in the country reaches the figure of 96,387 patients, of which 11,193 are children. With the current energy restriction, these figures increase by forcing the National Health System to postpone non-urgent surgeries to prioritize oncological and other life-defining surgeries.

Vulnerability is accentuated in programs of high social sensitivity, which have been prioritized, but even so they do not escape the multiplied limitations that the current energy situation of the country brings with it.

For instance, right now the Maternal and Child Care Program faces the challenge of ensuring the follow-up of 32 thousand pregnant women who require fundamental diagnostic ultrasounds. Likewise, the intermittency in refrigerated transport, due to lack of fuel, has made it difficult for more than 30 thousand children to receive their vaccines in a timely manner, despite having the biological vaccines in our warehouses.

In addition, 16,000 patients are being treated in radiotherapy and another 2,888 who depend on hemodialysis treatments, services that demand energy stability that is currently very difficult to guarantee. And yet despite these and other realities faced by the National Health System, its operation is not in a phase of collapse. The answer has not been paralysis but a strategic reorganization based on resilience and the optimization of resources.

Among other actions, it continues to strengthen the resolution in Primary Health Care, strengthening the Family Doctor and Nurse Program, and using tools such as telemedicine to guarantee the vitality of basic services.

And that capacity to respond rests, fundamentally, on the altruism, ethics, commitment and professionalism of Cuban human capital, which does not live isolated from the reality of the country. Our workers and students suffer in their homes the same shortages and long hours without electricity as the rest of the people they serve, and even so they turn the challenges of each day into new motivations to do and continue looking for alternative solutions to the lack of resources that exists in the institutions of the sector.

It is moving how, in provinces where 85% of neonatology specialists reside outside the municipality where they work, extraordinary alternatives are sought to ensure that no newborn is left unprotected in the face of the transport crisis.

The prestige of Cuban medicine has been forged with humanism and a sense of duty, not only within our borders, but also in the 165 nations where Cuban health collaborators provide or have provided services for decades, as is the case of Mexico. Today, that same commitment is what sustains the National Health System even under the growing pressure and the increasing technical wear and tear of its infrastructure.

We feel with pride that Cuba is not alone, thanks to the solidarity we receive from the most diverse corners of the world. Our eternal gratitude to all the sister nations and, especially, to the Mexican people and Government, whose outstretched hand has been a special support for us in such diverse scenarios.

The appeal we have made to the international community is not ideological, but profoundly humanitarian. Public health is a fundamental human right, which should not be conditioned by political disputes or by the use of energy as an instrument of coercion.

When energy is lacking, it is extremely difficult to maintain essential services, and when that happens, it is the people – especially the most vulnerable – who are negatively impacted and pay the risks of the stresses that this implies. Cuba will continue to take all possible measures to protect its population, which is now suffering the consequences of the cruel policy of asphyxiation by the United States as never before.

And in the face of this reality, our request to the international community continues to be to show its solidarity in order to confront the real and objective dimension of a criminal siege that threatens life itself.

Translation NSCUBA (Nova Scotia)

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

 Is Cuba facing collapse?

The Rundown: 

with Julio Fonseca from the Canadian Network on Cuba




Monday, March 9, 2026

Japan supports energy provision and food production in Cuba.

A Cooperative Project will provide equipment for food processing and energy provision in the municipality of Los Palacios in Pinar del Río.

 March  2026 

Ledys Camacho Casado

digital@opciones.cu


The Japanese “Non-refundable Financial Assistance Project for Community Initiatives favoring Human Security is flexible. In this case it focuses on the provision of equipment required for food processing and also in provision of diverse needs for the electrical sector in Los Palacios, municipality of Pinar del Rio.

The ambassador of Japan in Cuba, Nakamura Kazuhito, and the ONG OIKOS Cooperation and Development representative, Tiziana Rossetti, participated in the ceremony of the signing of this project that took place at the embassy of Japan in Havana, located at the Centre of Business of Miramar.

The value of the project in this case is more than 49 thousand euros; it will play an essential role in increasing productivity and ensuring stable access; it will also improve the quality of life of people living in Los Palacios.  

The Japanese ambassador expressed his wish that this project will contribute to improve the use of agricultural products and food processing with a goal of increasing food security in the specific municipality. During these energy challenging times in Cuba, this project’s focus, on improving food habits and nutrition in the population through increased access to healthy food, is very valuable.   

The provision of non-refundable funds for community projects like this is a modality of support that Japan offers and favors as an efficient and rapid response to a variety of community needs. It includes areas such as health, agriculture, education and also the environment.  

Translation NSCUBA (Nova Scotia)

Friday, March 6, 2026

 

Cuban President signs book of condolences in honor of Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

The head of state described the assassination of the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran as a flagrant violation of all norms of international law and human dignity

Author:  | internet@granma.cu

march 6, 2026 

Photo: Estudios Revolución

The First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba and President of the Republic, Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez, visited the headquarters of the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran on the island at noon on Thursday to sign the Book of Condolences opened in honor of Grand Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei.

We feel deep sorrow and grief upon learning of the assassination of the Supreme Leader of the Iranian nation as a result of the vile aggression of the United States and Israel, wrote the president, who described the act as a flagrant violation of all norms of international law and human dignity.
"We will remember him as the outstanding statesman and leader of the Iranian people, who contributed decisively to the development and consolidation of friendly and cooperative relations between our countries."
At this time of profound sorrow, the head of state emphasized, I convey the expressions of solidarity and heartfelt condolences of the Cuban people and government, and we extend them to his family, loved ones, and friends, he said.
At the diplomatic headquarters in Havana, Díaz-Canel was received by Iranian Ambassador Zabihollah Naderi and was accompanied in the simple tribute by Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla and the Director General of Bilateral Affairs of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Carlos Miguel Pereira Hernández.
Following the attacks perpetrated by Israel and the United States against Iran on February 28th, the President wrote on his social media account that these constituted a flagrant violation of international law and the United Nations Charter, ruined diplomatic efforts on the nuclear issue for the second time, and endangered regional and international peace and security. 
More recently, on March 4th, he also highlighted on X that "Cuba joins the international calls for an immediate end to the violation of international law as a result of the aggression by the United States and Israel against Iran and Lebanon, with political assassinations and indiscriminate attacks that include the killing of children and have led to the serious escalation we are seeing today in the turbulent Middle East, which, if not stopped, will have unpredictable consequences for all the peoples of the region, as well as for international peace, security, and stability."
We advocate, he said, for respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all nations in the region and an end to acts that cause human damage and damage to the civilian infrastructure of the Arab Gulf States, with which we have ties of friendship and cooperation. 
"Cuba reiterates its call to preserve the principles of good neighborliness, moderation, and dialogue at this delicate moment," he emphasized.