The U.S. and its allies should be sharing more export control information to better align their licensing decisions, said Thea Kendler, the Bureau of Industry and Security's assistant secretary for export administration. Although the U.S. is already sharing some of that information through the U.S.-EU Trade and Technology Council to keep Russia from acquiring sensitive technologies and other items for its military, Kendler said more can be done.
The U.K. Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee released a report June 30 critical of Britain's role in the global financial system as a "hub for illicit finance," particularly in light of the war in Ukraine. Russian assets are continuously laundered through the U.K. to finance President Vladimir Putin's war, the committee said. London's standing as a magnet for global finance presents a grave national security risk, the committee said. The report assesses "consequences of the complacency of successive Governments towards illicit finance and the adequacy of the current Government's response."
The EU General Court on June 27 dismissed an application from sanctioned Russian billionaire Alisher Usmanov for interim measures, according to an unofficial translation. The court ruled his application didn't show urgency or serious irreparable harm because Usmanov only discussed his damages that stemmed from the financial viability of three subsidiaries of USM Holding. Usmanov has a 49% share of the subsidiaries and thus does not control them, the court pointed out. As such, the applicant failed to show a direct causal link between the subsidiaries' finances and his placement, made in February, on the EU's Russian sanctions list.
The U.S. didn’t do enough to penalize the Chinese companies accused by the Commerce Department this week of helping Russia evade export controls (see 2206280056), the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee said. Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, said the U.S should also have placed financial sanctions on the companies, adding that State Department Deputy Secretary Wendy Sherman told the committee in April that China would face “consequences” if its companies provided support to Russia.
Switzerland announced June 29 it's imposing further sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine, implementing the EU's most recent sanctions package, which includes an embargo on crude oil and certain refined petroleum products from Russia. The Swiss Federal Council said the sanctions package also adds more than 100 Russian and Belarusian individuals and entities to the sanctions list and bans services related to the oil and petroleum products trade, including insurance or reinsurance for the transport of oil to any destination. The package also bans a number of financial and professional services such as auditing, public relations or consulting for Russian firms. Unlike the EU's sanctions package, Switzerland didn't ban the awarding of public contracts to Russian individuals or organizations with links to the country.
The U.K.'s Russian Elites, Proxies and Oligarchs Task Force has blocked or frozen over $30 billion in sanctioned Russian assets, the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation announced. The task force has frozen or seized sanctioned individuals' "high-value goods," and restricted sanctioned individuals' access to the international financial system, OFSI said. Through coordination between REPO Task Force members, around $300 billion of Russian Central Bank assets have been frozen, various yachts and other vessels controlled by sanctioned Russians detained and access to the global financial system cut off.
The U.K. added new entries to its Russia and Syria sanctions regimes in a pair of notices June 29. Under its Russia sanctions list, the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation added entries for eight individuals and five entities. The listed entities are the Joint Stock Company Marshal.Global, Joint Stock Company Moscow Industrial Bank, JSC Kolmar Group, JSC New Opportunities and R-Style Softlab.
The Group of Seven leading industrial countries this week agreed to a range of trade-related objectives to help achieve a “rules-based multilateral order” and “universal human rights,” including a commitment to the World Trade Organization and further sanctions against Russia. The G-7 countries -- joined by leaders from Argentina, India, Indonesia, Senegal, South Africa and Ukraine -- said they will stand against Russia for “as long as it takes.”
A $325 million superyacht allegedly owned by Russian billionaire Suleiman Kerimov and seized by U.S. authorities in Fiji has docked in San Diego after a legal battle in the Asia-Pacific island, Bloomberg reported June 28. The Amadea arrived in San Diego June 27 after a few days in Honolulu. The U.S. hired a new crew in Fiji to sail the ship, leaving the island June 7.
Export controls may not stop all illegal shipments, but that doesn’t mean the U.S. and others should not work to improve cooperation and coordination, experts agreed during a June 27 Brookings Institution panel.