Philippine Daily Inquirer

US SENATE STRIPS TRUMP OF SANCTIONS POWER OVER RUSSIA

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The US Senate on Thursday overwhelmi­ngly passed tough sanctions on Russia and Iran, sending the House of Representa­tives a bill that would prevent President Donald Trump from unilateral­ly easing penalties against Moscow.

The measure, which passed on a 98-2 vote, seeks to make Tehran pay a price for its “continued support of terrorism.”

It also aims to punish Russia’s Vladimir Putin for interferin­g in last year’s US election and to make it tougher for the White House to roll back sanctions.

US intelligen­ce chiefs have concluded that Russia orchestrat­ed a campaign to undermine the American election process that included espionage and cyberattac­ks, as a means to tilt the vote in Trump’s favor.

“Not only did we pass a new round of tough sanctions for Russia’s meddling in our election, we codified existing sanctions into law, making them harder to lift,” top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer said before the vote.

“We moved to make Congress, not the president, the final arbiter of sanctions relief when necessary,” he said.

“Any idea of the president’s that he can lift sanctions on his own for whatever reason are dashed by this legislatio­n.”

The bill as originally introduced was exclusivel­y about slapping new sanctions on Iran. But lawmakers attached a bipartisan amendment on Russia to it early this week.

The addition came with the White House deeply embroiled in crisis over whether Trump’s campaign team colluded with a Russian effort to sway the 2016 election.

The measure would require a green light from Congress in the event sanctions on Russia are relaxed, suspended or terminated.

It would codify in law the sanctions imposed by execu- tive decree by Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama, especially against the Russian energy industry.

And it would impose new sanctions on “corrupt Russian actors,” those implicated in serious human rights abuses or who supply weapons to Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria, and people who conduct “malicious cyber activity” on behalf of the Russian state.

“This is a very, very strong piece of legislatio­n,” Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair Bob Corker said on the Senate floor.

Corker, too, sounded pleased that the bill effectivel­y ties a president’s hands when it comes to unwinding certain sanctions on Russia.

“Today the United States Senate is asserting its responsibi­lities” regarding foreign policy, he added.

Any idea of the president’s that he can lift sanctions on his own for whatever reason are dashed by this legislatio­n Chuck Schumer Senate democrat

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