HAVANA — Massive power outages in Cuba meant that many people awoke Friday unaware that U.S. President Donald Trump had threatened to impose tariffs on any country that sells or supplies oil to the Caribbean island.
As word spread in Havana and beyond, anger and anguish boiled over about the decision that will only make life harder for Cubans already struggling with an increase in U.S. sanctions.
''This is a war,'' said Lázaro Alfonso, an 89-year-old retired graphic designer.
He described Trump as the ''sheriff of the world'' and said he feels like he's living in the Wild West, where anything goes.
After Trump made the announcement late Thursday, he described Cuba as a ''failing nation'' and said, ''it looks like it's something that's just not going to be able to survive.''
Alfonso, who lived through the severe economic depression in the 1990s known as the '' Special Period '' following cuts in Soviet aid, said the current situation in Cuba is worse, given the severe blackouts, a lack of basic goods and a scarcity of fuel.
''The only thing that's missing here in Cuba … is for bombs to start falling,'' he said.
Cuba is hit every day with widespread outages blamed on fuel shortages and crumbling infrastructure that have deepened an economic crisis exacerbated by a fall in tourism, an increase in U.S. sanctions and a failed internal financial reform to unify the currency. Now Cubans worry new restrictions on oil shipments will only make things worse.