The US Treasury Department dropped a heavy economic hammer on Cuba’s leadership on June 4, 2026. The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) added Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez, several family members, and key state-linked entities to its Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list, effectively cutting them off from the US financial system.
The move represents a notable escalation from prior measures, which had largely focused on visa restrictions. Now, any assets these individuals hold within US jurisdiction are frozen, and American persons are barred from doing business with them.
Who got designated, and what it means
The sanctions target a tight circle around Cuba’s president. Díaz-Canel himself tops the list, followed by his wife Lis Cuesta Peraza and his stepson Manuel Anido Cuesta. Also named are Alejandro Castro Espín and Raúl Alejandro Castro Calis, extending the pressure to the broader Castro family orbit that has shaped Cuban politics for decades.
On the institutional side, OFAC went after three entities: the Ministry of the Revolutionary Armed Forces (MINFAR), Amistur Cuba S.A., and Minera La Victoria S.A. MINFAR is Cuba’s military apparatus, which has long played an outsized role in the island’s economy. Amistur Cuba S.A. operates in the tourism sector, and Minera La Victoria S.A. is involved in mining operations.
The sanctions were issued under Executive Order 14404, which expanded the administration’s authority to target Cuban officials and their networks.
From visa bans to asset freezes
In 2025, the Trump administration had imposed visa restrictions on Díaz-Canel and other senior Cuban officials. The jump from travel restrictions to SDN designations is significant: it’s the difference between telling someone they can’t visit your house and telling every bank in the country to lock them out.
By sanctioning Díaz-Canel’s wife and stepson, the US is sending a message that extends beyond the political figure himself. It’s a tactic designed to close off potential channels for moving assets or circumventing restrictions through close relatives.
What this means for markets and policy watchers
US sanctions enforcement has increasingly become a focal point for the digital asset industry, and every new SDN designation reinforces the compliance obligations that exchanges, custodians, and payment processors face. Any platform that facilitates transactions with SDN-listed individuals risks severe penalties from OFAC, regardless of whether those transactions occur in dollars, euros, or Bitcoin.
The designation of MINFAR is particularly consequential given the military’s deep involvement in Cuba’s tourism and hospitality sectors, areas where some foreign companies have maintained limited commercial relationships. Those relationships are now radioactive from a US regulatory perspective.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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