Global Times

No quick solution to US sanctions imbroglio until main issue resolved

- The article is from the Xinhua News Agency. opinion@ globaltime­s.com.cn

With the US recklessly wielding sanctions on a number of countries of late, Russia has quickly responded by strengthen­ing cooperatio­n with other nations such as Iran and Turkey.

Though the active interactio­ns enable Moscow to establish closer foreign ties, no major changes can be expected until fundamenta­l problems are resolved, Russian experts said.

The US has lately gone further in its aggressive­ness and slapped economic sanctions on several countries. On August 7, the US reimposed sanctions on Iran that it lifted just two years ago. On August 8, Washington declared punitive measures against Russia that will affect almost all Russian state companies. On AuguSt 10, it announced the decision to double the tariffs on steel and aluminum products from Turkey.

“Sanctions – not only against Russia – are becoming one of the main instrument­s of US foreign policy,” Director General of the Russian Internatio­nal Affairs Council Andrey Kortunov said.

The heavy punches have immediatel­y brought about chaos in these economies. Russia’s ruble has plunged to its weakest since mid-2016 and Turkey’s lira lost 25 percent of its value in just one week.

The global economy is also taking a serious hit, with a universal depreciati­on in the currencies of emerging economies and fluctuatio­ns in the stock markets of developed countries, all in a chain reaction.

“The measures are sensitive, because they are aimed at reducing the incomes of national economies. This is painful for any country,” said Azhdar Kurtov, editor-in-chief of the National Strategic Issues journal published by the Russian Institute for Strategic Studies.

Kurtov said the US is trying to use economic means to force others to yield and follow its lead. Common challenges make alignment possible, and Russia has been in closer-thanever touch with its neighbors in the past few days.

Right after the sanctions on Iran were announced, Moscow declared to consolidat­e its economic cooperatio­n with Teheran and reiterated its determinat­ion to preserve and implement the landmark Iran nuclear deal, which was abandoned by Washington in May.

During the recent visit to Ankara, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that Turkey and Russia would take steps to enhance their strategic partnershi­p and continue talks for cooperatio­n on Syria. The two sides are reportedly discussing the scenario of settlement­s in their national currencies.

IRussia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Turkmenist­an and Azerbaijan have signed a new convention lately for collective use of the Caspian Sea. “Cooperatio­n allows countries to act more efficientl­y and find productive solutions,” Kurtov said. He noted that the pressure of US sanctions will also be reflected across regional organizati­ons in which these countries are included and therefore other members will “be forced to coordinate their actions” to cope with the sanctions as well.

The internatio­nal community may also question the global status of the US and seek more a pluralisti­c trade system if Washington continues to violate internatio­nal law and harm the interests of others, he said.

Despite closer ties with other countries, Russia for the moment still has limited bargaining chips on the issue of US sanctions.

Unbalanced trade between the US and Russia has made retaliatio­n from Moscow less intimidati­ng to Washington.

Experts say Russia is currently much more dependent on the West economical­ly than the other way round.

Russia should move to manage multiple risks and survive in an environmen­t of extremely severe pressure, said Fyodor Lukyanov, editor-in-chief of Russia in Global Affairs magazine.

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