Miami Herald

Biden: G-7 will ban Russian gold imports to deny Putin revenue for war in Ukraine

- BY MATT VISER, LOVEDAY MORRIS AND RICK NOACK

President Joe Biden and several of his counterpar­ts in the Group of Seven nations on Sunday announced a ban on new imports of Russian gold — and appeared to be moving toward consensus on a price cap on Russian gas — to further isolate the country from financial markets and punish President Vladimir Putin for his invasion of Ukraine.

The ban on gold imports, which could amount to a penalty of tens of billions of dollars, appeared to be the primary new economic sanction targeting Russia to come out of the summit. Administra­tion officials declined to comment on whether other punitive steps would be taken.

“The United States has imposed unpreceden­ted costs on Putin to deny him the revenue he needs to fund his war against Ukraine,” Biden tweeted Sunday morning, noting that gold is “a major export that rakes in tens of billions of dollars for Russia.”

Biden and other leaders of industrial­ized nations began their meetings in southern Germany on Sunday for a summit set to be dominated by discussion­s about the fallout from the war in Ukraine.

Biden, who arrived late Saturday night, attended Mass with a priest from the U.S. Army before starting his day with a bilateral meeting with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to discuss the war.

The two leaders made small talk as Biden, silhouette­d by the Alps, quipped that he used to ski a lot but had not done so in some time. “It’s beautiful,” he remarked.

The conversati­on then turned more serious, with Biden thanking Scholz for Germany’s resolve and his ability to keep the alliance united. “We have to stay together. Because Putin has been counting on from the beginning that somehow NATO and the G-7 would splinter,” Biden said. “But we haven’t, and we’re not going to.”

In the afternoon, the summit’s leaders announced a new global infrastruc­ture investment program, with a goal of mobilizing $600 billion in public and private investment­s by 2027. The spend

ing aims – with the United States pledging $200 billion – would go toward improving health, communicat­ions and energy infrastruc­ture in low- and middle-income countries. It aims to help counter ambitious spending around the world by China, which has invested heavily in Africa and Asia through its Belt and Road Initiative.

“Our nations and our world stand at a genuine inflection point in history,” Biden said.

Some of the initial projects that Biden administra­tion officials highlighte­d include a $2 billion project to develop a solar panel project in southern Angola; building telecommun­ications cables that would connect Singapore to France through Egypt and the Horn of Africa, extending high-speed internet access; and building a large multi-vaccine manufactur­ing facility in Senegal.

The day also included hints of disagreeme­nts among some of the top leaders, including France President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

In a statement, Downing Street said that Johnson had “stressed” to Macron that “any attempt to settle the [Ukraine] conflict now will only cause enduring instabilit­y and give Putin license to manipulate both sovereign countries and internatio­nal markets in perpetuity.”

The remarks appeared to be criticism of Macron’s comments in mid-June that Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky and his officials will need to negotiate with Russia at some point. Coming before Macron, Scholz and other European leaders traveled to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, those comments raised concerns among Ukrainian officials that France and Germany might push for talks with Russia as the economic toll of the war mounts.

French officials have rejected those concerns and clarified that it is up to Ukraine to determine when the time for talks has come. A spokespers­on for the French presidency said Sunday that Macron and Johnson “had a discussion on Ukraine in which the President strongly reaffirmed his determinat­ion to support Ukraine.”

France has delivered or pledged almost one fourth of its existing stocks of Caesar artillery weapons systems to Ukraine, and the country’s lower dependency on Russian fossil fuels allowed France to become an early champion of an European Union embargo on Russian oil.

But both Macron and Scholz have spoken to

Putin several times on the phone since the invasion, which has prompted particular criticism in Eastern Europe.

The United States has been pushing for an agreement on a price cap on Russian oil imports to hurt Moscow’s ability to finance the war. The G-7 leaders are moving toward a consensus on a price cap, according to one person with knowledge of Sunday’s discussion­s who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the private talks.

The aim is to simultaneo­usly put a ceiling on the amount that nations pay for Russian oil, with the hope of hurting Moscow’s ability to fund the war, while trying to tamp down inflation at the fuel pump. Soaring prices for oil have taken some of the bite out of countries’ efforts to diversify from Russian energy since Moscow is paid more for less volume.

To incentiviz­e other countries to take part, the leaders have discussed ways to make it difficult to insure or ship Russian oil that doesn’t comply with the price cap.

During the meeting on Sunday, Macron stressed that a price cap should also cover gas. Price caps on Russian natural gas flowing in pipelines to Europe are considered easier to enforce as the infrastruc­ture means it can’t be sold elsewhere.

 ?? MARKUS SCHREIBER AP ?? President Joe Biden, third from left, poses with other Group of Seven leaders at Castle Elmau in Kruen, near GarmischPa­rtenkirche­n, Germany, on Sunday. The G-7 leaders are meeting for their annual gathering through Tuesday.
MARKUS SCHREIBER AP President Joe Biden, third from left, poses with other Group of Seven leaders at Castle Elmau in Kruen, near GarmischPa­rtenkirche­n, Germany, on Sunday. The G-7 leaders are meeting for their annual gathering through Tuesday.

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