The Manica Post

Trump approves new ‘flawed’ Russia sanctions

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PRESIDENT Donald Trump has signed into a law a bill which imposes new sanctions on Russia for their alleged meddling in the 2016 election.

The bill, which was signed in private at the White House, also imposes sanctions on Iran and North Korea.

Mr Trump accused Congress of overreach on the legislatio­n, which “handcuffs” him from easing Russia penalties.

Moscow denies interferin­g in the US election, and Mr Trump has denied colluding with the Kremlin.

Hours after the US president signed the bill, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: “This isn’t news.

“The thing is, the bill was approved and was going to automatica­lly become law with or without the president’s signature.” Moscow had already retaliated by ordering 755 people expelled from its US embassy and consulates.

Several European nations, including Germany, are also unhappy because the new law could penalise their companies working on pipelines from Russia, for example, by limiting their access to US banks.

European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker warned of “unintended unilateral effects that impact the EU’s energy security interests”.

In signing the Countering America’s Adversarie­s Through Sanctions Act, Mr Trump attached a statement calling the measure “deeply flawed”.

He accused Congress, which last week overwhelmi­ngly passed the bill and sent it to the White House, of oversteppi­ng its constituti­onal authority.

“As president, I can make far better deals with foreign countries than Congress,” he said.

Donald Trump has signed the bill but he’s clearly not happy about it. Hardly surprising, as any president would probably object to congressio­nal efforts to curtail executive power included in this legislatio­n. As is becoming routine, however, this administra­tion didn’t draw its battle lines in the expected way.

There were several “signing statements”. The first reads like a standard legalistic descriptio­n of a presidenti­al action with a bevy of “yes, but...” reservatio­ns.

Another statement is decidedly more Trumpian, complete with a shot at Congress for not passing healthcare reform and a closing boast about his business empire and negotiatin­g prowess. Releasing multiple signing statements with somewhat divergent tones is unusual, to say the least, and could be an indication that, despite the efforts of new chief of staff John Kelly, the administra­tion is still not speaking with a unified voice. — bbcnews

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