San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

EU CHIEF: RUSSIA COULD BE CUT OFF FROM MARKETS, TECH GOODS

Western nations preparing sanctions in event of invasion

- BY KARL RITTER & GEIR MOULSON Ritter and Moulson write for The Associated Press.

Moscow would have its access to financial markets and high-tech goods limited under Western sanctions being prepared in case Russia attacks Ukraine, a top European Union official said Saturday.

The comments from Ursula von der Leyen, head of the EU’S Executive Commission, came as tensions over Russia’s intentions toward Ukraine intensifie­d. U.S. President Joe Biden said Frisaid.

he was “convinced” that Russian President Vladimir Putin has decided to invade the neighborin­g country.

“The Kremlin’s dangerous thinking, which comes straight out of a dark past, may cost Russia a prosperous future,” von der Leyen said during the annual Munich Security Conference, where U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris also spoke.

Von der Leyen said the EU’S executive arm has developed a “robust and comprehens­ive package” of possible financial sanctions against Russia with the U.S., U.K. and Canada.

“In case that Russia strikes, we will limit the access to financial markets for the Russian economy and (impose) export controls will stop the possibilit­y for Russia to modernize and diversify its economy,” she added. “And we have a lot of high-tech goods where we have a global dominance, and that are absolutely necessary for Russia and cannot be replaced easily.”

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the U.K. was coordinati­ng its sanctions closely with the EU.

“If Russia invades its neighbor, we will sanction Russian individual­s and companies of strategic importance to the Russian state and we will make it impossible for them to raise finance on the London capital markets,” he said in Munich. Johnson added that authoritie­s would look for “the ultimate beneficiar­ies” of Rusday sian-owned companies and entities.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that, during a meeting Tuesday with Putin, he “made clear that any further violation of the territoria­l integrity of Ukraine will have high costs for Russia, politicall­y, economical­ly and geo-strategica­lly.”

Western leaders so far have not specified what precise Russian action would trigger sanctions. A French official who wasn’t authorized to be publicly named and spoke on condition of anonymity after Biden conferred with several counterpar­ts on Friday said they were talking about an invasion of territory currently under the control of the government in Kyiv.

“It is in the event of an inthat vasion of this territory that the massive sanctions that we are talking about would be triggered,” the official said.

Parts of eastern Ukraine are under the control of prorussia separatist­s who have been fighting Ukrainian forces since 2014, the year that Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula.

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, asked what Russian actions would trigger sanctions, didn’t offer any details after a meeting in Munich with her counterpar­ts from the Group of Seven industrial powers and Ukraine.

“A breach of Ukraine’s integrity and sovereignt­y is a breach of Ukraine’s integrity and sovereignt­y,” Baerbock

“You can’t say that one geographic­al part is a bit more Ukraine and another is a bit less Ukraine.”

She said Western officials have made clear that an actual invasion isn’t the only possible scenario but “are prepared for every situation.” Using a chess analogy, the German minister said: “If you present your next five moves in public, you won’t be particular­ly successful.”

In Munich with other members of the U.S. Congress, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said sanctions might include the SWIFT banking system, which could cut Russia off from most internatio­nal financial transactio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States