Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
The Biden administration has imposed some of its toughest sanctions on Russia to hit Moscow’s energy revenues that are fueling its war in Ukraine.
These measures target more than 200 legal entities and individuals, ranging from traders and officials to insurance companies, as well as hundreds of oil tankers.
For the first time since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Britain will join the US in direct sanctions against the energy companies Gazprom Nafta and Surgutnaftagaz.
“The fight against Russian oil companies is draining Russia’s military money — and every ruble we take from Putin’s hands helps save Ukrainian lives,” said Foreign Minister David Lammy.
Some of the measures announced by the U.S. Treasury Department on Friday will be signed into law, meaning the incoming Trump administration will need to get Congress involved if it wants to reverse them.
Washington is also seeking to severely limit who can legally buy Russian energy, and is pursuing what it has called Moscow’s “shadow fleet” of vessels that deliver oil around the world.
US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the actions “increase the sanctions risk associated with the trade in oil from Russia, including facilitating the supply and financing of Russian oil exports.”
President Joe Biden said Russian leader Vladimir Putin was in “serious shape,” adding that it was “very important that he has no breathing space to continue doing the terrible things he continues to do.”
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky thanked the US for what he called its “bipartisan support.”
With the beginning of the war in Ukraine, cap on oil prices was one of the main measures aimed at restraining the Russian export of energy carriers.
But as Olga Khakova of the Atlantic Council’s Global Energy Center explained, it is efficiency was “diluted” because he was also trying to avoid a fall in the volume of Russian oil on the market.
This was due to concerns about the impact of supply cuts on the global economy.
But experts say the oil market is now in a healthier position.
“U.S. oil production (and exports) are at record levels and rising, so the impact on prices of Russian oil being taken out of the market, the target of today’s sanctions, will be mitigated,” said Daniel Fried, distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council. .
“The U.S. government has gone after the Russian oil sector in a broad sense, intending to deliver what could turn out to be a major blow,” Fried added.
John Herbst, the former US ambassador to Ukraine, said the steps are “great” but their implementation will be crucial.
“This means that the Trump administration will determine whether these measures really put pressure on the Russian economy,” he said.