Mercury (Hobart)

Fury over sanctions

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US PRESIDENT Donald Trump reluctantl­y signed off on new sanctions against Russia yesterday, bowing to domestic pressure and putting efforts to improve ties with the Kremlin in peril.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said the sanctions amounted to “fullfledge­d economic war on Russia” and demonstrat­ed Mr Trump’s “total weakness ... in the most humiliatin­g way”.

“It ends hopes for improving our relations with the new US administra­tion,” Mr Medvedev declared on Facebook.

Mr Trump signed the legislatio­n behind closed doors, after failed White House efforts to scupper or water down the Bill. Mr Trump’s reluctance was on full display in an angry signing statement, in which he called the legislatio­n “significan­tly flawed”.

“In its haste to pass this legislatio­n, the Congress included a number of clearly un- constituti­onal provisions,” he said, including curbs on the president’s ability to “negotiate” with Russia.

“I built a truly great company worth many billions of dollars. That is a big part of the reason I was elected. As presi- dent, I can make far better deals with foreign countries than Congress.”

The legislatio­n — which also included measures against North Korea and Iran — targets the Russian energy sector, giving Washington the ability to sanction companies involved in developing Russian pipelines, and placing curbs on weapons exporters.

It also constrains Mr Trump’s ability to waive the penalties, a statement of mistrust from the Republican­controlled Congress, which remains unsettled by Mr Trump’s warm words for President Vladimir Putin.

“The framers of our constituti­on made the Congress and the president coequal branches of government. This Bill has already proven the wisdom of that choice,” Senator John McCain said.

“I hope the president will be as vocal about Russia’s aggressive behaviour as he was about his concerns with this legislatio­n.”

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