Global Times

US transferri­ng Russian assets to Ukraine will hollow out US credibilit­y

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According to US media reports, US Attorney General Merrick Garland announced on Friday the first transfer of forfeited assets from sanctions against a Russian oligarch during an appearance with Ukrainian Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin at the US Justice Department. The assets, confiscate­d from Russian oligarch Konstantin Malofeyev after his indictment on sanction evasions in April, will go toward aiding Ukraine.

US sanctions against Russia are illegal and are unilateral moves unauthoriz­ed by the United Nations. Now the US is even transferri­ng the personal assets of Russian individual­s to others, which highlights the plundering nature of the US as a robber.

The transfer of assets is a high-profile political stunt, which the US government is pretty good at. The $5.4 million assets can be just pocket money for the US – it offers to Ukraine as aid, while Ukraine would use it to buy weapons from the US to feed the US military-industrial complex. This reminds people of how the US dealt with the $7 billion in frozen funds from Afghanista­n’s central bank.

In February 2022, US President Joe Biden signed an executive order allowing approximat­ely half of the $7 billion to be reserved for victims of 9/11 attacks, which means the US keeps the money for its own.

On the one hand, the US makes a profit from war. On the other, it aims to achieve its geopolitic­al goal through war. Recently, the US and some Western countries said they will ship a huge, wide-ranging package of heavy weapons to Ukraine, a move that obviously will intensify the situation. Xu Liang, an associate professor at the School of Internatio­nal Relations of Beijing Internatio­nal Studies University, pointed out that the US transferri­ng the assets of a Russian oligarch is extending actions of supporting Ukraine from military aid to the economic sphere, which can be seen as another move to escalate tensions.

Cui Heng, an assistant research fellow from the Center for Russian Studies of East China Normal University, noted that the US’ strategy of imposing maximum pressure on Russia has been escalating via salamislic­ing tactics, so as to gain more bargaining chips in the RussiaUkra­ine conflict.

One of the US’ aims is to set a model for Europe. If Europe does not follow, it means Europe is not ‘politicall­y correct.’ Just like after the US said it would deliver M1 Abrams battle tanks to Ukraine, Germany acted ‘in close coordinati­on’ by deciding to send Leopard 2 battle tanks to Ukraine. The US hopes Europe can imitate its transfer of Russian assets.

After all, the US only cares about its own interests. In the Russia-Ukraine conflict, US’ goal is to weaken or even drag down Russia to strip Russia of the ability to challenge the Western world. By assisting Ukraine, the US has squeezed the negotiatio­n room in the Russia-Ukraine battlefiel­d and prolonged the conflict. Europe has paid a heavy price for the worsening security situation around it, while the US has benefited the most.

The US does not want to spend a single penny on the conflict. Xu believes that US’ transferri­ng of Russian assets to Ukraine will only backfire in the long term. It shows that the assets in the US of any individual­s may be deprived due to internatio­nal relations. This will consume US’ credibilit­y, leading to many countries in the non-Western camp to step up efforts to “de-dollarizat­ion,” and the “dollar hegemony” of the US will be dealt a heavy blow and risk facing with an end.

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