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US treasury secretary Janet Yellen. Picture: REUTERS
US treasury secretary Janet Yellen. Picture: REUTERS

Washington — US President Joe Biden will sign an executive order on Friday allowing Washington to impose sanctions on financial institutions that help Russia evade sanctions, US treasury secretary Janet Yellen said.

The executive order, part of a wider US crackdown on sanctions evasion, also gives Washington the ability to ban products originating in Russia but processed in third countries, such as seafood and diamonds, Yellen said in a statement.

“Today we are taking steps to level new and powerful tools against Russia’s war machine,” Yellen said. “And we will not hesitate to use the new tools provided by this authority to take decisive and surgical action against financial institutions that facilitate the supply of Russia’s war machine.”

Senior administration officials said the new executive order will make clear to financial institutions that they must either stop allowing their companies to ship components and goods to the Russian defence sector, or face significant sanctions.

The US and its allies, including the EU and Britain, imposed sanctions on Russia after the February 2022 invasion of Ukraine and have continued to ratchet up pressure on Moscow, targeting Russian President Vladimir Putin, the financial sector and dozens of oligarchs.

The order is being issued in co-ordination with allies.

The US has repeatedly warned companies against evading US sanctions imposed on Russia, and has targeted firms in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Turkey and elsewhere that it has accused of helping Moscow skirt the measures.

Senior US officials have also travelled to Turkey, the UAE and other countries to warn that businesses could lose access to Group of Seven (G7) markets if they do business with entities subject to US curbs.

One of the senior officials said Washington’s initial sanctions and export controls have had a meaningful effect, with Russia’s economy now 5% smaller than predicted before the war and grappling with a benchmark interest rate of 16%.

The new order will give Treasury and its allies new tools to target the networks Moscow is trying to put in place to circumvent these sanctions through the use of front companies and “witting and unwitting financial intermediaries”, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“We’ve sanctioned a number of these companies that we’ve found, but ultimately the choke point for these companies and Russia’s ability to continue to try to circumvent our sanctions is the financial system,” one of the senior officials said.

“What this tool allows us to do is to target those institutions and give them a very stark choice.”

The provisions will take effect immediately after Biden signs the executive order on Friday.

The officials said they are not aware of any US or European institutions that are in violation of the order, noting that most US and European firms have already scaled back their business with Russia dramatically.

The executive order will also give Washington the ability to ban products that originated in Russia but are “substantially transformed” outside the country, including diamonds, a second senior administration official said.

The action comes after the G7 earlier in December announced a direct ban on Russian diamonds from January 1 followed by phased-in restrictions on indirect imports of Russian gems from about March 1.

The US has already banned the direct import of nonindustrial Russian diamonds, but this measure will extend the ban to cover Russian-origin diamonds processed elsewhere, the official said.

Reuters

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