The Maui News

Russia sanctions bill heads to Trump

- By VIVIAN SALAMA The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is likely to sign a tough new sanctions bill that includes proposed measures targeting Russia — a remarkable concession that the president has yet to sell his party on his hopes for forging a warmer relationsh­ip with Moscow.

Trump’s vow to extend a hand of cooperatio­n to Russian President Vladimir Putin has been met with resistance as skeptical lawmakers look to limit the executive power’s leeway to go easy on Moscow over its meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

The Senate voted decisively on Thursday to approve the new package of financial sanctions against Russia, Iran and North Korea two days after the House pushed the measure through by an overwhelmi­ng margin.

Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., had said he wanted to re-examine the bill’s North Korea portion, potentiall­y delaying it before legislator­s take their August recess. But late Wednesday he announced that he sees “a path forward on legislatio­n to sanction Iran, Russia and North Korea” following “very productive discussion­s.”

The proposed measures target Russia’s energy sector as part of legislatio­n that prevents Trump from easing sanctions on Moscow without congressio­nal approval.

Two administra­tion officials say that Trump is likely to sign the bill, despite last-minute wrangling over language and bureaucrac­y. Faced with nearunanim­ous bipartisan support for the bill in both the House and Senate, the president finds his hands are tied, according to two administra­tion officials and two advisers with knowledge of the discussion­s.

The officials added that the president has been reluctant to proceed with the bill, even after it was revised last week to include some changes that American and European companies sought to ensure that business deals were not stifled by new sanctions. Trump has privately expressed frustratio­n over Congress’ ability to limit or override the power of the White House on national security matters, saying that it is complicati­ng efforts to coordinate with allies — particular­ly those in Europe that have taken a different approach to sanctions.

The administra­tion officials and advisers demanded anonymity to discuss the private sanctions deliberati­ons. Trump’s new communicat­ions director, Anthony Scaramucci, hedged the inevitabil­ity that Trump will sign, telling CNN’s New Day on Thursday that the president “may sign the sanctions exactly the way they are or he may veto the sanctions and negotiate an even tougher deal against the Russians.”

“There is a tremendous and unpreceden­ted effort by Congress to assert its influence on Russia and foreign policy because it does not trust the president,” said Elizabeth Rosenberg, senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security and a former senior adviser at the Treasury Department.

“Lawmakers are so distrustfu­l of the administra­tion that they are imposing requiremen­ts to conduct congressio­nal review of attempts by the president to roll back sanctions, and in some instances prevent him from doing so,” Rosenberg said.

Lawmakers have been keen to implement a sturdy clampdown on North Korea’s confrontat­ional actions — most recently after its first test of an interconti­nental ballistic missile. They’ve also traditiona­lly favored a policy that keeps Moscow in check for its own aggressive measures in Eastern Europe and Syria, as well as its efforts to disrupt elections in the U.S. and across Europe.

“The message coming from Congress on a bipartisan basis is these are hostile regimes and sanctions are warranted — sanctions are called for,” Ryan told reporters Thursday. “And we want to make sure that they’re tough sanctions and that they’re durable sanctions. It took us a while to figure this out and come together to get the policy right . . . and we all agreed we believe these tough hostile regimes deserve sanctions and this is the bipartisan compromise that produces that.”

Trump hasn’t threatened to reject the bill even though Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and other senior administra­tion officials had objected to a mandated congressio­nal review should the president attempt to ease or lift the sanctions on Russia. They’ve argued it would infringe on the president’s executive authority and tie his hands as he explores avenues of communicat­ion and cooperatio­n between the two former Cold War foes.

Russia’s ambitions to be on equal footing with the U.S. suffered a setback in 2014 when the Obama administra­tion authorized sanctions against sectors of the Russian economy, including financial services, energy, mining and defense. The administra­tion also sanctioned people in Putin’s inner circle accused of underminin­g peace in Ukraine. Add to that falling oil prices and a weak ruble, and Russia’s economy was shackled.

Sanctions relief is important to Russia’s broader objective of superpower status, shown by its bullish Syria policy. Syria’s Russian-backed military made major gains in rebel-held eastern Aleppo in recent days and rebel resistance appeared to be crumbling. While Moscow and Washington are continuous­ly at odds over Syria, the Obama administra­tion did not impose any Syria-related sanctions.

Trump’s positions on Russia are generally hard to assess because he’s often stepped away from his more controvers­ial proposals. In his meeting this month with Putin on the sidelines of the Group of 20 leading rich and developing nations summit in Germany, Trump said he repeatedly addressed the topic of Russia’s meddling in the U.S. election. But he never directly answered questions about whether he believed Putin’s claims that Russia had nothing to do with it.

“There is a bipartisan consensus to confront Russia across the board — from its actions in Ukraine, Syria, cyber, its election meddling — you name it,” said Boris Zilberman, a Russia sanctions expert with the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s.

“Russia is the driving force in the sanctions bill,” he added. “So we see the legislativ­e branch now trying to send a clear message to the executive branch on where they stand on the issue.”

Bipartisan support for the legislatio­n is on display in both House and Senate

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