Deccan Chronicle

US to slap new sanctions on Russia

Action aimed at punishing President Putin’s regime for having ‘used chemical or biological weapons’ in violation of internatio­nal law

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Washington/ London, Aug. 9: The US on Thursday said it will impose tough new sanctions on Russia after determinin­g that Moscow used a deadly military-grade nerve agent to kill a former Russian double agent and his daughter in the UK.

Sergei Skripal, a former Russian spy, and his daughter Yulia Skripal were hospitalis­ed and treated for a nerve agent attack in March. While Yulia was discharged from a British hospital in April, her father recovered and left the hospital in May.

The State Department said in a statement that the sanctions were in response to the use of a ‘Novichok’ nerve agent in an attempt to assassinat­e UK citizen and his daughter on March 4.

Russia has rejected allegation­s levelled by the UK that it was behind the deadly nerve-agent attack in Salisbury. The US, on August 6, determined that the Russian government “has used chemical or biological weapons in violation of internatio­nal law or has used lethal chemical or biological weapons against its own nationals,” State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said. The statement said that following a 15-day Congressio­nal notificati­on period, these sanctions will take effect around August 22.

The State Department notified Congress on Wednesday of the first of two potential tranches of sanctions required under the 1991 law. Unless Russia takes certain steps, a second set of penalties — more stringent than this first round — must follow, according to the law. The first set of sanctions targets certain items the US exports to Russia that could have military uses — so-called dual use technologi­es. These are sensitive goods that normally would go through a case-by-case review before they are exported. With these sanctions, the exports will be presumptiv­ely denied, CNN reported.

The sanctions are mandated under the Chemical and Biological Weapons and Warfare Eliminatio­n Act of 1991.

The Washington Post quoted a State Department official as saying that the sanctions could have a significan­t impact on trade with Russia, including prohibitio­n of licenses on sending some US goods there, such as electronic devices. “But unless Russia agrees within 90 days to stop all use of chemical weapons and permit inspection­s to confirm their eliminatio­n, additional­ly mandated measures could cut off almost all trade between the two countries, prohibit landing rights for Russian airlines, and lead to a suspension of diplomatic relations,” the Post report said.

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