U.S. Slams Russia With More Sanctions Targeting Banking, Aviation, Oil
Calling Russia’s role in the latest rounds of
violence in eastern Ukraine “indisputable,” the White House unleashed
its toughest raft of sanctions yet on Monday, targeting the country's
banking, finance, aviation and oil and gas sectors—a move that brings it
much closer to hobbling large swaths of the Russian economy.
The new slate of sanctions named seven additional people to
the list—all seen as close to President Vladimir Putin—and 17 entities,
including Russian officials and companies representing critical sectors
of Russia’s economy, bringing the total number of individuals and
entities blacklisted as of Monday to 64.
[Related: How the West is Pushing Putin's Buttons]
The sanctions against Russia, which began in early March,
have been ratcheted up in recent weeks as conflicts continue to escalate
along Russia’s eastern border with Ukraine. Last week, President Barack
Obama threatened that sanctions would intensify if Russia did not
actively move to disarm combatants and defuse the tensions, in
compliance with the April 17 Geneva agreement.
“Russia’s involvement in the recent violence in eastern
Ukraine is indisputable,” the White House said in a statement on Monday,
announcing the new sanctions.
The latest blacklist, seen as the toughest on Russia yet, focuses on the business interests and finances of Russian billionaire Gennady Timchenko, who was already blacklisted in March.
The U.S. Department of the Treasury, in conjunction with the White
House, froze the assets of Volga Group, a privately held,
Luxembourg-based investment vehicle of Timchenko, and Stroytransgaz
Holding, an engineering and construction company to Russia’s oil and gas
industry—also controlled by Timchenko.
Volga Group, which holds Timchenko’s assets, calls itself
“one of the largest investment groups in Russia,” with “investments in
18 core companies, located mainly in Russia.” The investment firm had
consolidated revenue in 2012 of $116 billion, based on investments in
energy, logistics, infrastructure, financial services and consumer
goods.
Volga Group holds the proceeds from Timchenko’s sale of his stake in oil-trading firm Gunvor Group last month, Newsweek has
learned. The sale took place the day before his blacklisting on March
20. Timchenko is a co-founder of the firm—with headquarters in Geneva
and Nicosia, Cyprus—but no longer a shareholder.
“None of the companies mentioned by the U.S. has any
connection to events in Ukraine,” Stuart Leasor, a London-based
spokesman for Volga Group, told Newsweek.
In striking out at Timchenko through Stroytransgaz Holding
and its subsidiaries—including one in the offshore tax haven of
Cyprus—the U.S. also targeted a key component of Russia's gas exports,
as its clients include Gazprom, ConocoPhillips and Saudi Aramco,
according to Stroytransgaz’s website. Timchenko owns a controlling stake
in Stroytransgaz, according to Itar-Tass, Russia's state-owned news
agency.
The U.S. also sanctioned Igor Sechin, a long-standing
member of Putin's inner circle and the executive chairman of Rosneft,
the state-owned Russian oil company. He is a leader of the so-called
Siloviki group of nationalists and conservatives composed of senior
current and former security and intelligence officials in Russia. It is
not immediately clear what Sechin's stake in Rosneft might be or how any
stake might affect Rosneft's dealings with foreign oil companies and
banks. Rosneft has agreements with ExxonMobil to explore vast oil tracts
in the Arctic and Western Siberia, among other regions.
Also hit was Avia Group LLC, a company with close ties to
Moscow's Sheremetyevo International Airport, Russia's main international
airport, and a related Avia Group unit in St. Petersburg, Avia Group
Nord.
Avia Group has been working to build a business aviation
center in Moscow that would cater to Russian and foreign investors. It
also has subsidiaries and related entities in New York, London and
Dubai, among other major cities.
Of the 24 new individuals and entities named to the Russia
blacklist, around 10 of the sanctioned entities are connected to
Timchenko via Volga Group.
In a recent interview with Newsweek, David Cohen,
Undersecretary at the U.S. Department of the Treasury for Terrorism and
Financial Intelligence, which puts out the blacklist designating U.S.
sanctions, said that the U.S. was certain of Putin’s links to Timchenko,
although he would not elaborate in detail on what they were.
“I will say that in all of our designations, we take great care before we designate someone,” Cohen told Newsweek before
the latest round of sanctions. “We have to meet a legal standard, and
all of these designations are subject to challenges in court. We have
never lost a case where someone has challenged our evidence.”
The Office of Foreign Assets Control,
part of the Department of the Treasury, is responsible for blacklisting
people and entities hostile to American national-security interests
under presidential national emergency powers. In the recent past, it has
sanctioned heads of state such as Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
At present, the blacklist includes nearly 6,000 people and
entities around the world, including the latest sanctions against
“specially designated nationals” from Russia and Ukraine.
Last week a Treasury representative said the possibility of adding Putin to the blacklist was not off the table.
No comments:
Post a Comment