Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S. hits Russia with new sanctions

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U.S. lawmakers had asked the Trump administra­tion to make the formal determinat­ion to trigger sanctions in March.

After the White House missed a two-month deadline to take action, Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee, sent a second letter two weeks ago, pressing the president to act.

Critics say the administra­tion’s slow response was another example of President Donald Trump’s reluctance to confront Russian President Vladimir Putin.

On Wednesday, Mr. Royce praised the new sanctions.

“The administra­tion is rightly acting to uphold internatio­nal bans on the use of chemical weapons,” Mr. Royce said in a statement. “The mandatory sanctions that follow this determinat­ion are key to increasing pressure on Russia. Vladimir Putin must know that we will not tolerate his deadly acts, or his ongoing attacks on our democratic process.”

Administra­tion officials downplayed the delay in imposing the sanctions, saying it was because of the complicate­d nature of the measures. They noted that in previous applicatio­ns of the same law — against Syria and North Korea — deadlines also were missed.

The officials also sought to dispel any idea that Mr. Trump dragged his feet or that there were internal disputes over whether to impose additional sanctions.

“This is not about different bits of the administra­tion going in different directions,” the official said.

Mr. Trump also delayed enacting an earlier package of sanctions ordered by Congress to punish Moscow for its interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. election and continued meddling.

The sanctions announced Wednesday could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars, the State official said, affecting a “very great sweep” of the Russian economy.

But they also said the new order would contain “carve-outs,” or exceptions to the sanctions, including space programs and foreign aid.

The sanctions will go into effect in about two weeks while Congress is notified, the statement said.

If Russia cannot demonstrat­e it has stopped using chemical or biological weapons within 90 days, the administra­tion would be required to levy a second “Draconian” tranche of sanctions, the official said.

The use of chemical or biological weapons violates the Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Eliminatio­n Act of 1991.

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