US expands Cuba sanctions, targets GAESA network and Castro family member

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US expands Cuba sanctions, targets GAESA network and Castro family member

Synopsis

The Trump administration has designated five Cuban entities — spanning logistics, banking, mining, and steel — plus a Castro family member, in its most sweeping single-day Cuba sanctions action yet. The move targets GAESA's financial and operational infrastructure and warns foreign investors they could be next.

Key Takeaways

The Trump administration sanctioned five entities and one individual tied to Cuba on 24 June .
Three designations target subsidiaries of GAESA , Cuba's military-run economic conglomerate.
Sanctioned entities include logistics firm AUSA , financial institutions RAFIN S.A. and BFI , mining enterprise GEOMINERA , and steel producer Antillana de Acero .
Annalie Lilliam Rueda Cardero , a family member of former Cuban intelligence chief Alejandro Castro Espín , was also designated.
The State Department warned foreign firms operating in Cuba's financial, mining, defence, and energy sectors of potential sanctions exposure.

The Trump administration on 24 June broadened its sanctions campaign against Cuba, designating five entities tied to key sectors of the island's economy along with a member of the Castro family, as part of what Washington described as a sustained effort to cut off revenue streams flowing to the Cuban government.

What the New Sanctions Cover

Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced the measures, stating they targeted entities and individuals that 'fund, facilitate, or benefit from the regime's malign activities, both in Cuba and across our hemisphere.' Three of the five designated entities are linked to Grupo de Administración Empresarial S.A. (GAESA), the military-run conglomerate that Washington describes as the financial backbone of the Cuban state.

'GAESA continues to operate as the financial muscle behind the Cuban regime's repressive security apparatus,' Rubio said.

The Five Designated Entities

ALMACENES UNIVERSALES S.A. (AUSA), a GAESA subsidiary, was sanctioned for its role in storage, transport, and port-related services. According to the State Department, AUSA controls container traffic at Cuba's Mariel Special Development Zone, a major logistics hub that has drawn significant foreign investment.

Also designated were RAFIN S.A., described as a key financial management arm of GAESA, and BANCO FINANCIERO INTERNACIONAL S.A. (BFI), which reportedly handles much of the banking activity involving foreign entities doing business with Cuba. Both operate within Cuba's financial services sector.

Washington additionally targeted GEOMINERA, S.A., a state-owned enterprise managing Cuba's non-nickel mineral assets — including partnerships with foreign investors such as Australian-based Antilles Gold — and EMPRESA SIDERURGICA JOSE MARTI, known as Antillana de Acero, Cuba's largest raw steel producer.

Castro Family Member Designated

In a notable escalation, the administration designated Annalie Lilliam Rueda Cardero, citing her status as an adult family member of Alejandro Castro Espín — the former head of Cuban intelligence services and son of former Cuban leader Raúl Castro. Alejandro Castro Espín himself was sanctioned earlier in June, making this designation part of a widening net around the Castro-linked network.

Warning to Foreign Businesses

The State Department issued a broader warning to foreign companies and financial institutions, cautioning that dealings with sanctioned entities or operations in Cuba's financial, mining, security, defence, or energy sectors could expose them to sanctions risk. This signals Washington's intent to use secondary pressure to isolate Havana from global capital flows.

This is the latest in a series of escalatory measures under the Trump administration's Cuba policy, which has consistently sought to tighten the economic vice on Havana. With GAESA subsidiaries, financial institutions, mining firms, and a Castro family member all now in the crosshairs, the sanctions architecture around Cuba is becoming markedly more comprehensive.

Point of View

A tactic the US has used with varying effect in Venezuela and Iran. But the more consequential signal is the warning to foreign investors: by flagging the Mariel Special Development Zone and Antilles Gold's GEOMINERA partner, Washington is effectively telling third-country firms that Cuban exposure now carries active sanctions risk. Whether that deters investment or merely reshuffles it through non-US intermediaries is the real test. Cuba's economy has weathered decades of sanctions by adapting supply chains; the question is whether this round is comprehensive enough to close those workarounds.
NationPress
24 Jun 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did the US expand sanctions against Cuba in June 2024?
The Trump administration expanded Cuba sanctions to cut off revenue streams to the Cuban government, targeting entities it says fund or benefit from the regime's activities. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the measures were aimed at those who 'fund, facilitate, or benefit from the regime's malign activities, both in Cuba and across our hemisphere.'
What is GAESA and why is it being targeted?
GAESA, or Grupo de Administración Empresarial S.A., is a military-run conglomerate that the US describes as the financial backbone of the Cuban government. Three of the five newly sanctioned entities are GAESA subsidiaries, including a logistics firm, a financial management arm, and a banking institution handling foreign transactions.
Who is Annalie Lilliam Rueda Cardero and why was she sanctioned?
Annalie Lilliam Rueda Cardero is an adult family member of Alejandro Castro Espín, the former head of Cuban intelligence services and son of former Cuban leader Raúl Castro. She was designated as part of Washington's widening pressure on the Castro-linked network, following Alejandro Castro Espín's own sanctioning earlier in June.
Which foreign companies could be affected by the new Cuba sanctions?
The State Department warned that any foreign companies or financial institutions dealing with sanctioned entities — or operating in Cuba's financial, mining, security, defence, or energy sectors — face potential sanctions risk. Australian-based Antilles Gold was specifically noted as a partner of newly sanctioned mining firm GEOMINERA.
What is the Mariel Special Development Zone and why does it matter?
The Mariel Special Development Zone is a major logistics hub in Cuba that has attracted significant foreign investment. Sanctioned entity AUSA controls container traffic there, meaning the zone is now directly implicated in the US sanctions framework, raising risks for businesses operating within it.
Nation Press
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