USA TODAY International Edition

Seize assets of Putin, cronies to pay to rebuild Ukraine

- Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse and Rep. Tom Malinowski Sheldon Whitehouse is a U. S. senator from Rhode Island. U. S. Rep. Tom Malinowski represents New Jersey’s 7th District in the House of Representa­tives.

The split screen is stomach- turning: In Ukraine, Vladimir Putin’s rockets fall on fleeing refugees, missiles gash occupied apartment buildings and hospitals, and civilians huddle in metro stations as bombs fall above.

Outside Ukraine, mega- yachts ferry Russian oligarchs between tropical islands, private jets shuttle them to ski vacations and priceless art adorns the walls of their villas.

Putin’s enablers – and even members of his family – live abroad in laundered luxury off the wealth they stole with his permission.

Now imagine those mega- yachts commandeer­ed, the private jets grounded and requisitio­ned, and the highpriced art whisked off to auction from the seized villas – with the proceeds used to aid the Ukrainian people.

That would be a fitting use of the money that built the army besieging their nation.

Some nations have already started this work:

● France has claimed a luxury yacht worth almost $ 120 million linked to Russian oil tycoon Igor Sechin.

● German authoritie­s have restricted a yacht worth more than $ 600 million owned by Russian billionair­e Alisher Usmanov.

● The United Kingdom is exploring new authoritie­s to sanction oligarch wealth in a range of forms – action that has sent oligarchs in “Londongrad” scurrying for cover.

Under current law, the United States and our allies can generally “block” or freeze such assets – temporaril­y denying sanctioned oligarchs and companies their use – but not seize them outright. We believe that an exception should be made for Russia following Putin’s murderous invasion of Ukraine, given the clear evidence that sanctioned oligarchs made their billions thanks to corrupt relationsh­ips with the Russian government and the likely massive cost of reconstruc­ting Ukraine when Russia’s armies are beaten back.

It is hard to imagine giving Russia’s wealth back to Putin and to his cronies as Ukraine lies in ruins and its people discover more mass graves.

It is hard to imagine giving Putin’s cronies their stolen assets back after the harm they helped him cause. And a halfbillio­n- dollar yacht could rebuild a lot of schools, hospitals and apartment buildings in Ukraine.

With bipartisan support, we have introduced legislatio­n in the House of Representa­tives and the Senate to give the Biden administra­tion the authority, limited to two years, to seize sanctioned Russians’ assets and to use them to support humanitari­an, military and reconstruc­tion aid to Ukraine.

This would give the United States a powerful new tool to punish – or leverage cooperatio­n from – the wealthy and powerful Russians who have supported Putin’s regime while giving Ukrainians a small measure of justice.

There are even signs that the European Union and European allies are exploring options to confiscate assets of sanctioned Russian kleptocrat­s.

Putin and his cronies are nothing special – they just happen to run a big, oil- rich country with a military at their command. We’ve long known, as Sen. John McCain, R- Ariz., often used to say, that “Putin is a gangster, with an army, running a gas station.”

Yet for far too long, the United States and our European allies have been complicit in the kleptocrac­y that Putin built. We’ve allowed his cronies the best of both worlds: They steal money at home, where there is no rule of law, and then shelter it in jurisdicti­ons like New York, Paris and London behind rule- of- law protection­s.

Congress must act

In those wealthy enclaves, kleptocrat money has enriched lawyers, trust fund managers, real estate brokers and art dealers, while driving up costs for everyone else.

That strengthen­s the moral case for taking the extraordin­ary measures we propose.

Those efforts will be complicate­d and must be well funded: We should fully fund, for example, the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network, which tracks the movement of dirty money around the world. We passed a limited boost in the Ukraine funding package, but FinCEN needs more.

We will also need to coordinate closely with allies to close off sanctuarie­s for oligarchs and collect the evidence needed to justify asset seizures.

The Biden administra­tion has announced a transatlan­tic, interagenc­y task force to help find and crack down on ill- gotten assets stowed in the West by Russian oligarchs, their families and their stooges. That is a good start and something Congress will need to oversee and expand.

Decisive, strategic defeat

Putin’s Ukraine invasion must result in a decisive, strategic defeat for his regime, its enablers and what they stand for. As Ukraine battles the onslaught, ordinary Ukrainians – and Russians – should see oligarchs’ yachts, jets and Picassos auctioned off. They should see police tape around oligarch villas and penthouse apartments.

These goods and properties should not automatica­lly be returned to their corrupt owners when the crisis is over. The wealth that supported Putin’s regime should be used to rebuild the country he is destroying.

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