The Columbus Dispatch

US adds new sanctions on Russia

Move targets 250 people, firms 1 year into invasion

- Fatima Hussein

WASHINGTON – The U.S. announced a new round of sanctions on Russian firms, banks, manufactur­ers and people Friday, aiming them at entities that helped Russia evade sanctions earlier in the year-old war against Ukraine.

Russia’s metals and mining sector is among those targeted in one of the U.S. Treasury Department’s “most significan­t sanctions actions to date,” according to the agency.

The action, taken in coordinati­on with Group of Seven allies, seeks to punish 250 people and firms, puts financial blocks on banks, arms dealers and technology companies tied to weapons production, and goes after alleged sanctions evaders in countries from the United Arab Emirates to Switzerlan­d.

“Our sanctions have had both shortterm and long-term impact, seen acutely in Russia’s struggle to replenish its weapons and in its isolated economy,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement. “Our actions today with our G7 partners show that we will stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes.”

Yellen is attending the G-20 finance ministers’ meetings in Bengaluru, India, this week. On Friday morning she told senior Russian officials attending meetings that “their continued work for the Kremlin makes them complicit in Putin’s atrocities.”

“They bear responsibi­lity for the lives

and livelihood­s being taken in Ukraine and the harm caused globally,” she said.

The sanctions come after the White House announced early Friday morning that the Pentagon would commit $2 billion

for more rounds of ammunition and a variety of small, high-tech drones for the fight against Russia.

The State and Commerce department­s and the Office of the U.S. Trade

Representa­tive will also issue plans Friday to increase pressure on Russia. These steps increase tariffs on Russian products and add nearly 90 Russian and third-country companies, including from China, to a list of identified sanctions evaders.

Named in Friday’s sanctions package are a dozen financial institutio­ns, including Russia’s largest nonstate public bank, importers of microelect­ronics and producers of carbon fiber, a key material for defense systems.

The package names more than 30 people and firms allegedly connected to Russia’s sanctions evasion efforts. Among them: Swiss-italian businessma­n Walter Moretti and his businesses; Nurmurad Kurbanov, a Russian-turkmen arms dealer who is alleged to have represente­d Russian and Belarusian defense firms abroad; and Russian businessma­n Aleksandr Yevgenyevi­ch Udodov, the former brother-in-law of Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin.

More than 30 countries representi­ng more than half the world’s economy have already imposed unpreceden­ted sanctions on the Russian economy, making it the most sanctioned nation in the world.

At the G-20 meetings Friday, Britain’s treasury chief, Jeremy Hunt said, “We don’t think the job is by any means done.”

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Marie, at a G-20 news conference said, “our sanctions are strong, they are efficient, they are hitting and reducing all revenues of Russia.”

“They are disorganiz­ing Russian industry, underminin­g war efforts,” he said. “Sanctions are effective and will be more effective in the long term.”

 ?? ANDREJ ISAKOVIC/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Protesters in Belgrade, Serbia, on Friday mark one year since the invasion of Ukraine by Russia. The White House announced Friday the Pentagon would commit $2 billion for the fight against Russia.
ANDREJ ISAKOVIC/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Protesters in Belgrade, Serbia, on Friday mark one year since the invasion of Ukraine by Russia. The White House announced Friday the Pentagon would commit $2 billion for the fight against Russia.

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