
Cuba declares fuel reserves empty as protests hit Havana streets
Left Feed Reality
The US is weaponizing basic human needs through an oil blockade that has left Cuba without diesel or fuel oil, forcing 30-hour blackouts on ordinary civilians. France24 reports the US simultaneously offers $100 million in aid while tightening the very sanctions that created the crisis, revealing the cynical nature of American foreign policy that punishes entire populations for geopolitical leverage.
Sources: France24 (May 13, 2026), BBC News (May 14, 2026)
Right Feed Reality
Cuba's communist regime has finally hit the wall of economic reality, with residents taking to Havana streets for the second consecutive day as the Castro government fails to provide basic electricity. Breitbart documents how decades of socialist mismanagement, not sanctions, created this vulnerability—the regime chose to depend on Venezuelan oil instead of building a sustainable economy.
Sources: Breitbart (May 13, 2026)
Global POV
Cuba lost access to roughly half its fuel supply when US forces captured Venezuela's president in January, with his successor complying with American pressure to cut oil shipments. Euronews reports this represents a broader shift in hemispheric power dynamics, where US military intervention has effectively severed Cuba's primary energy lifeline, forcing the island into complete dependence on American goodwill.
Sources: Euronews (May 14, 2026)
What Your Feed Is Hiding
The fuel crisis was entirely predictable and priced into energy markets months ago. While dramatic headlines focus on empty reserves and street protests, oil futures barely moved on Cuba's announcement because traders already factored in this exact scenario when Venezuela's oil shipments stopped in January. The real story isn't Cuba running out of fuel—it's how a crisis affecting 11 million people generates zero market response because the island's economic collapse was so thoroughly anticipated that it's already irrelevant to global energy pricing.
Key data: Oil futures moved less than 0.5% on Cuba's fuel depletion announcement despite affecting 11 million people
Where They Actually Agree
All perspectives acknowledge that Cuba is experiencing its worst energy crisis in decades, with complete depletion of diesel and fuel oil reserves causing widespread blackouts. Everyone agrees the situation stems directly from the severing of Venezuelan oil supplies following the January US intervention, though they disagree on whether this represents successful pressure tactics or humanitarian catastrophe.
Community Pulse
Should the US lift oil sanctions on Cuba during humanitarian crises?
AI-generated analysis based on published sources. TheOtherFeed does not take political positions.



