The Niagara Falls Review

U.S. adds to growing list of sanctions against Russia

- MATTHEW LEE

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion added to its growing list of sanctions against Russia on Tuesday as U.S. lawmakers urged tighter economic restrictio­ns on Moscow and Britain’s top diplomat accused Russia’s leader of pursuing policies that make the world more dangerous.

The Treasury Department announced two new actions against Russian targets: blacklisti­ng two companies and two individual­s suspected of trying to circumvent U.S. sanctions imposed in June in response to cyberattac­ks; and against two Russian shipping companies suspected of transferri­ng petroleum products to North Korean vessels in violation of U.N. Security Council resolution­s.

While President Donald

Trump has sought closer ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin, his administra­tion has intensifie­d economic pressure on Moscow over what it describes as “malign Russian activity” in Ukraine and Syria and Russia’s attempts to disrupt western democracie­s.

Two senior officials from the State and Treasury department­s told a Senate hearing Tuesday that since January 2017, 217 Russian business people, officials, and private and state-run companies, including 14 banks and 20 energy firms, have been sanctioned. In addition, they recalled that the administra­tion had expelled 60 Russian spies and closed Russia’s consulates in San Francisco and Seattle.

Marshall Billingsle­a, the Treasury Department’s top terrorist financing official, acknowledg­ed that the threat from Russia was “significan­t and continuing” but told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that without the sanctions “their behaviour would be even further off the charts.”

He and the State Department’s top diplomat for Europe, Wess Mitchell, said Russia is feeling the impact, costing its economy tens of billions, with companies under sanctions losing a quarter of their operating revenue.

But the officials faced questions from skeptical lawmakers about the administra­tion’s policy toward Russia, particular­ly since Trump has sent conflictin­g messages about it. The committee’s chair, Sen. Bob Corker called Trump’s comments “undiscipli­ned” and Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen lamented that the president had issued “contradict­ory” statements about Russia. “Until we see a change in that behaviour we are going to continue to see and have concern.”

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said it appeared to him as though the administra­tion was pursuing two different policies: one of the president’s and one of federal national security agencies.

Mitchell denied that. “This is the president’s administra­tion, this is his foreign policy.” Although Trump himself has repeatedly cast doubt on Russia’s culpabilit­y in 2016 election meddling, Mitchell and Billingsle­a both pointed to the Kremlin.

“Putin wants to break apart the American republic, not by influencin­g an election or two, but by systematic­ally inflaming the perceived fault-lines that exist within our society,” Mitchell said. “His is a strategy of chaos for strategic effect. Accepting this fact is absolutely essential for developing a long-term comprehens­ive response to the problem. The most dangerous thing we could do is to politicize the challenge, which in itself would be a gift to Putin.”

Russia denies accusation­s of election meddling, but suspicions of interferen­ce deepened Tuesday when Microsoft said it had uncovered new Russian hacking efforts targeting U.S. political groups before November’s midterm elections.

Microsoft said that a group tied to the Russian government created fake websites that appeared to spoof two American conservati­ve organizati­ons: the Hudson Institute and the Internatio­nal Republican Institute.

Meanwhile Britain’s foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt, called on the European Union to ensure that its sanctions against Russia were comprehens­ive, in response to accusation­s Moscow poisoned a former Russian spy in Britain, using a nerve agent.

“Of course we must engage with Moscow, but we must also be blunt,” Hunt said in a speech. “Russia’s foreign policy under President Putin has made the world a more dangerous place.”

The U.S. sanctions announced Tuesday targeted two companies and people suspected of trying to circumvent existing sanctions against Divetechno­services of St. Petersburg. That company was sanctioned in June for procuring underwater equipment and diving systems for Russian government agencies, including the Federal Security Service, formerly Russia’s KGB spy service.

The U.S. alleges that Marina Igorevna Tsareva, an import manager for Divetechno­services, attempted to help the company circumvent U.S. sanctions through Vela-Marine Limited of St. Petersburg. Treasury said another employee, Anton Aleksandro­vich Nagibin, also helped Divetechno­services circumvent U.S. sanctions.

The two companies targeted in Tuesday’s action were Vela-Marine and Lacno S.R.O., which is based in Slovakia.

The sanctions freeze any assets they may have in U.S. jurisdicti­ons and bar Americans from doing business with them.

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