East Bay Times

No lack of financial sanctions if Russia invades Ukraine

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON >> The Biden administra­tion has plenty of options to make good on its pledge to hit Russia financiall­y if President Vladimir Putin invades Ukraine, from sanctions targeting Putin’s associates to cutting Russia off from the financial system that sends money flowing around the world.

The United States and European allies have made no public mention of any plans to respond militarily themselves if Putin sends troops massed along the border into Ukraine, a former Soviet republic with close historical and cultural ties to Russia but now eager to ally with NATO and the West.

Instead, payback could be all about the money.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken last week promised financial pain — “high impact economic measures that we’ve refrained from taking in the past.” President Joe Biden on Friday said the U.S. had developed the “most comprehens­ive and meaningful set of initiative­s to make it very, very difficult for Mr. Putin.”

The United States over the past decade already has put a range of sanctions in place against Russian entities and individual­s, many of them over Russia’s invasion and annexation of Crimea and its support for armed separatist­s in eastern Ukraine in 2014. U.S. sanctions also have sought to punish Russia for election interferen­ce, malicious cyber activities and human rights abuses.

Since 2014, the West also has helped Ukraine build up its military. So while Putin denies any intention of launching an offensive, his troops would face a Ukrainian army much more capable of putting up a fight.

The sanctions now imposed on Russians include asset freezes, bans on doing business with U.S. companies and denial of entry to the United States. But in seeking to punish Russia, the West over the years has weighed even bigger financial penalties.

That includes the socalled nuclear option: blocking Russia from the Belgium-based SWIFT

system of financial payments that moves money among thousands of banks around the world.

The European Parliament this year approved a nonbinding resolution calling for that step if Russia does invade Ukraine.

When the U.S. successful­ly pressured SWIFT to disconnect Iranian banks over Iran’s nuclear program, the country lost almost half of its oil export revenue and a third of its foreign trade, said Maria Shagina, an expert on sanctions and energy politics affiliated with the Carnegie Moscow Center think tank.

The impact on Russia’s economy would be “equally devastatin­g,” Shagina writes. Russia depends on its oil and natural gas exports for more than one-third of its federal revenues, and depends on SWIFT to make the petrodolla­rs flow.

Russia has worked since 2014 to insulate its domestic financial systems from such a cutoff. A SWIFT cutoff would cause indirect pain for Western economies as well.

John Herbst, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine and career diplomat, said Friday he believed that while “SWIFT is not off the table, it would be a last resort.”

The Biden administra­tion earlier this year further limited Russia’s ability to borrow money by banning U.S. financial institutio­ns from buying Russian government bonds directly from state institutio­ns. But the sanctions didn’t target the secondary market, leaving this as a possible next step.

 ?? ANDRIY DUBCHAK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Ukrainian soldier holds a cat and walks in a trench on the line of separation from pro-Russian rebels near Debaltsevo, Donetsk region, Ukraine, on Friday.
ANDRIY DUBCHAK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Ukrainian soldier holds a cat and walks in a trench on the line of separation from pro-Russian rebels near Debaltsevo, Donetsk region, Ukraine, on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States