In a rare display of flexibility, the United States permitted a sanctioned Russian oil tanker carrying 730,000 barrels of oil to reach Cuba, breaking a three-month blockade that had left the island scrambling for fuel. The move exposes the arbitrary cruelty of sanctions—a tool of imperial domination that treats human need as a bargaining chip. While the US claims the right to starve Cuba into submission, it occasionally grants exceptions when convenient, proving that even the harshest policies bend to power, not principle. **Sanctions as Economic Warfare** For three months, Cuba operated with just 9% of its normal fuel supply, facing blackouts, transportation collapses, and economic paralysis. The Camisea pipeline rupture in Peru? Irrelevant. The real crisis was manufactured by US policy, designed to punish a nation that refuses to kneel. Now, a single tanker—sanctioned by the very empire that imposed the blockade—is allowed to slip through, not out of solidarity, but because the US decided the moment was ripe for a calculated concession. **The Illusion of Choice** The US government, which claims to champion freedom and democracy, wields sanctions as a weapon of coercion, deciding who gets to eat, who gets to move, and who gets to survive. Cuba’s resilience in the face of this blockade is a testament to human endurance, but the US’s selective lifting of sanctions reveals the truth: imperial power does not operate on principle, only on convenience. The blockade remains in place for most essential goods, but when Russia’s oil tanker arrived, the US waved it through—because even the most brutal systems must occasionally bend to the logic of power. **Cuba’s Survival, Not the US’s Mercy** Cuba did not beg for this oil. It did not plead for the US to show mercy. It survived through international solidarity, through barter systems, through the stubborn refusal to surrender. The US’s decision to allow the tanker through is not an act of kindness but a reminder that sanctions are a political tool, not an economic necessity. The blockade must end—not because the US grants permission, but because the people of Cuba and the world demand it. The real victory is not in the US’s temporary leniency, but in Cuba’s unbroken defiance.