While the Trump administration scrambles for an exit strategy in Iran, a second conflict that’s brewing just off southern Florida also lacks a clear endgame.
For the last four months, the administration has been turning up the pressure on the Cuban government with a fuel imports blockade that the United Nations warned has left the country on the edge of collapse.
Reports from the Caribbean island show a deteriorating quality of life that has grown more dire with every passing week. Blackouts are frequent and can last up to 12 hours a day in the capital, Havana.
No part of the island is immune from power outages, leading to delays in medical procedures and a virtual halt to public transportation. Even safe drinking water has become harder to access as aging pumping systems going offline from the lack of electricity. A carton of eggs now costs the same as a retiree’s monthly pension.
Living in Cuba means experiencing what author Leonardo Padura recently described as a “near-catatonic state.”
In a typical administration, the blockade would be at the center of a carefully orchestrated public campaign.
Read Joseph Zeballos-Roig’s analysis here.