Thursday, November 14, 2024

US widens Russia sanctions in banking crackdown

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By Tom EspinerBBC News

Getty Images Moscow money exchangeGetty Images

The US has broadened its sanctions on Russia, including a fresh crackdown on banks dealing with sanctioned entities.

It expands a December programme to sanction foreign banks deemed to be aiding Russia’s war effort in Ukraine.

The US also placed sanctions on the Moscow stock exchange, leading to it halting trading in dollars and euros.

It also moved to try to restrict Russia’s use of technology, including chips and software.

US President Joe Biden signed an executive order in December that imposed sanctions on banks dealing with about 1,200 individuals and companies deemed to be helping Russia’s war machine.

Those sanctions, which expose banks to the risk of being cut off from the US financial system, have now been expanded to about 4,500 entities.

The US will also crack down on gold-laundering.

Peter Harrell, a former White House senior director for international economics, told the Reuters news agency that the US “is shifting towards something that begins to look like an effort to set up a global financial embargo on Russia”.

As part of this effort, the US Treasury announced that it would impose sanctions on parts of Russia’s financial system, including the Moscow Exchange, which is one of Russia’s main stock exchanges.

The stock exchange, which is Russia’s largest foreign exchange market, then said the sanctions had forced it to stop trading in dollars and euros.

The US also focused on technology in its expanded sanctions programme.

Chips and other tech made in the US have been found in downed Russian equipment on Ukraine battlefields, including drones, radios, missiles and armoured vehicles.

The sanctions aim to make it more difficult for companies to supply that tech.

The US will target shell firms in Hong Kong selling chips to Russia.

In addition, software and IT services will also be restricted for sanctioned entities, although the US said its actions “are not intended to disrupt civil society and civil telecommunications”.

Despite the wave of sanctions brought against Russia since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the International Monetary Fund predicts that the country will record economic growth of 3.2% this year.

But analysts say sanctions will eventually make it harder for Moscow to wage its war, and overtime weaken Russia’s economy.

“Russia’s war economy is deeply isolated from the international financial system, leaving the Kremlin’s military desperate for access to the outside world,” said Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

“Today’s actions strike at their remaining avenues for international materials and equipment, including their reliance on critical supplies from third countries,” she added.

The sanctions were imposed as Mr Biden prepared for a G7 summit in southern Italy with the leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan.

One of the G7 leaders’ priorities is boosting support for Ukraine, which is now into its third year of resisting Russia’s invasion.

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