From Reuters:
“U.S. and EU
impose sanctions on Russia over Navalny poisoning, jailing”
The United
States on Tuesday imposed sanctions to punish Russia for what it described as
Moscow’s attempt to poison opposition leader Alexei Navalny with a nerve agent
last year, in President Joe Biden’s most direct challenge yet to the Kremlin. The
announcement of action against seven Russian officials and 14 entities made by
senior Biden administration officials marked a sharp departure from former
President Donald Trump’s reluctance to confront Russian President Vladimir
Putin.
Navalny, 44,
fell ill on a flight in Siberia in August and was airlifted to Germany, where
doctors concluded he had been poisoned with a nerve agent. The Kremlin has
denies it had a role in his illness and said it had seen no proof he was
poisoned. Navalny was arrested in January on his return from Germany following
treatment for poisoning with what many Western countries say was a
military-grade nerve agent. He was jailed on Feb. 2 for parole violations on
what he says were politically motivated charges, and sent to a penal colony on
Monday. U.S. officials did not immediately name the people or entities targeted
and it was not clear if the sanctions, which typically freeze assets under U.S.
jurisdiction, would have more than a symbolic impact. Navalny, a critic and
political opponent of Putin, was targeted for raising raise questions about
Russian corruption and was the latest example of Russian efforts to silence
dissent, the U.S. officials said. “Russia’s attempt to kill Mr. Navalny follows
an alarming pattern of chemical weapons use by Russia,” a senior U.S. official
told reporters on a call, referring to the March 2018 poisoning of former
Russian military intelligence officer Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, England with
a military-grade nerve agent. The officials said seven senior Russian
government officials would face sanctions, such as asset freezes. In addition
14 entities associated with Russia’s biological and chemical agent production,
including 13 commercial parties - nine in Russia, three in Germany and one in
Switzerland - and a Russian government research institute, were hit with
punitive measures.
The United
States acted in concert with the European Union, which on Tuesday imposed
largely symbolic sanctions on four senior Russian officials close to Putin, a
move agreed by EU ministers last week in response to Navalny’s jailing. The EU
sanctions apply to Alexander Bastrykin, whose Investigative Committee handles
major criminal probes and reports to Putin; Igor Krasnov, Russia’s prosecutor-general
since 2020; Viktor Zolotov, head of Russia’s National Guard who threatened
Navalny with violence in 2018; and Alexander Kalashnikov, head of the federal
prison service. The EU sanctions fall short of calls by Navalny’s supporters to
punish wealthy businessmen around Putin known as oligarchs who travel regularly
to the EU.
Unlike Western
sanctions imposed on Russia’s economy in 2014 in response to its annexation of
Crimea, travel bans and asset freezes have less impact, experts say, because
state officials do not have funds in EU banks or travel to the EU. The U.S.
officials, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity, reiterated Biden’s
call for Russia to release Navalny. Further sanctions are likely as the United
States assesses the Russian role in the massive SolarWinds cyber hack and
allegations that Russia sought to interfere in the 2020 U.S. election and
offered bounties to Taliban fighters to kill American soldiers in Afghanistan,
the officials said. Biden has taken a tougher approach to Putin than Trump. “We
expect this relationship to remain a challenge,” said a U.S. official, saying
Washington would work with Moscow when it served U.S. interests. “Given
Russia’s conduct in recent months and years, there will also undoubtedly be
adversarial elements.” Before the U.S. announcement, Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov said Moscow would respond in kind to any new U.S. sanctions over
Navalny, the Interfax news agency reported. The new sanctions against heads of
law enforcement agencies is yet another an attempt to intervene into Russia’s
internal affairs, Interfax news agency quoted Russian lawmaker Vasily Piskarev
as saying. “They (the U.S.) don’t understand that these sanctions won’t earn
any result,” Vladimir Dzhabarov, first deputy head of the upper house’s
international affairs committee, told Russia Today.
^ This may not
seem like a really big deal, but other than military action (which wouldn’t
have happened) the only thing the EU and the US had to use were sanctions. ^
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