The OP was pretty extensively answered, and I do understand what the question was, but the fact that one can indeed buy Cuban Cigars was not stated. The condition is a {i}very* specific one, and I thought it useful to know.
This is interesting. Does it fall under “trading with the enemy” if you purchase (and smoke) a Cuban cigar in, say, Spain? Here’s something I just thought of: one of my cousins was taking a semester of school abroad. The location? Cuba. Yes, really. Therefore, wouldn’t they be violating the “trading with the enemy” act on a daily basis, purchasing food and such? It would certainly be an interesting case if such a thing were brought to trial
On another aside, I recall recently reading that a snooty private club in Manhattan was recently raided, due to suspicion of hoarding…Cuban cigars. Their humidor was full of them, and I believe arrests were made.
Well, you’re right there! After the embargo, all of the Cuban cigar makers set up production plants in the Dominican Republic, so any Cohiba, Romeo y Julieta, etc. that you see in a US store is going to be produced there and not in Cuba. It’s not that Dominican cigars are of poor quality; most cigar afficianados would rate them almost as highly as real Cubans. The fact is just that the copies aren’t quite as bold and robust as the originals (as Dominicans are generally considered more mild than Cubans).
If this were the case, then the rather lucrative business of Cuban cigars in Canada (which I’m sure caters more to rich Americans than to natives) would be quickly destroyed.
I would say that Cuban cigars are a much richer, more robust and heavier smoke than any other. I don’t know if this is necessarily a good thing or not(personally, I wouldn’t recommend a Cuban to a novice smoker…I’d recommend they start with a much milder cigar first), but to the afficianado, it’s a matter of taste.