Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump ban stops cruise ships from traveling to Cuba

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WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion on Tuesday ended the most popular forms of U.S. travel to Cuba, banning cruise ships and a heavily used category of educationa­l travel in an attempt to cut off cash to the island’s communist government.

Cruise travel from the U.S. to Cuba began in May 2016 during President Barack Obama’s opening with the island. It has become the most popular form of U.S. leisure travel to the island, bringing 142,721 people in the first four months of the year, a more than 300% increase over the same period last year. For travelers confused about the thicket of federal regulation­s governing travel to Cuba, cruises offered a simple, onestop, guaranteed-legal way to travel.

That now appears to be over.

“Cruise ships as well as recreation­al and pleasure vessels are prohibited from departing the U.S. on temporary sojourn to Cuba effective tomorrow,” the Commerce Department said in a statement to The Associated Press.

The new restrictio­ns are part of a broader effort by the administra­tion of President Donald Trump to roll back the Obama-era efforts to restore normal relations between the United States and Cuba, which drew sharp criticism from the more hardline elements of the Cuban-American community and their allies in Congress.

Treasury said the sanctions would take effect on Wednesday after they are published in the Federal Register.

U.S. national security adviser John Bolton, who declared Cuba part of a “troika of tyranny” along with Nicaragua and Venezuela as he outlined plans for sanctions in November, said the new policy is intended to deny the Cuban government a vital source of revenue.

“The Administra­tion has advanced the President’s Cuba policy by ending ‘veiled tourism’ to Cuba and imposing restrictio­ns on vessels,” Mr. Bolton said on Twitter. “We will continue to take actions to restrict the Cuban regime’s access to U.S. dollars.”

The Cuban government imposed food rationing last month as a result of tightened U.S. sanctions and a drop in subsidized oil and other aid from Venezuela. For the Cuban government, cruise travel generated many millions of dollars a year in docking fees and payments for onshore excursions, although those figures were never made public. Cuba also has become the most-requested destinatio­n for many South Floridabas­ed cruise lines.

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