Santa Fe New Mexican

U.S. sanctions could send Russia relations to new low as ruble tumbles

- By Susannah George and Vladimir Isachenkov

WASHINGTON — Russia typically brushes off new U.S. sanctions. Not this time.

The Trump administra­tion announceme­nt of export restrictio­ns in response to accusation­s Moscow used a nerve agent to poison a former Russian spy in Britain sent the ruble tumbling to a two-year low and drew a stern warning from its prime minister. While the initial sanctions may have a limited impact, a second batch expected within months could hit the Russian economy much harder and send already tense relations into a tailspin.

If sanctions are expanded even further to target Russia’s top state-controlled banks, freezing their dollar transactio­ns — as proposed under legislatio­n introduced in the Senate this month — it would amount to a “declaratio­n of economic war,” Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said Friday.

So much for President Donald Trump’s hopes for better relations with Moscow.

On his watch, the U.S. has imposed a slew of sanctions on Russia for human rights abuses, meddling in the U.S. election and Russian military aggression in Ukraine and Syria. For the most part, they have punished Russian officials and associates of President Vladimir Putin rather than targeting broad economic sectors.

In 2014, both the U.S. and European Union introduced sanctions that restricted Russia’s access to global financial markets and to equipment for new energy projects. Those measures were punishing, but the sanctions announced by the Trump administra­tion this past week could be even worse.

The restrictio­ns were triggered under U.S. law on chemical weapons following a formal U.S. determinat­ion that Russia used the Novichok nerve agent to poison former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the English city of Salisbury in March.

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