Putin: more U.S. sanctions would be
harmful, talk of retaliation premature
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[June 17, 2017]
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian President
Vladimir Putin said new sanctions under consideration by the United
States would damage relations between the two countries, but it was too
early to talk about retaliation, state news agency RIA reported on
Saturday.
The U.S. Senate voted nearly unanimously earlier this week for
legislation to impose new sanctions on Moscow and force President Donald
Trump to get Congress' approval before easing any existing sanctions.
"This will, indeed, complicate Russia-American relations. I think this
is harmful," Putin said, according to RIA.
In an interview with Rossiya1 state TV channel, excerpts of which were
shown during the day on Saturday, Putin said he needed to see how the
situation with sanctions evolved.
"That is why it is premature to speak publicly about our retaliatory
actions," RIA quoted him as saying.
Russia and the West have traded economic blows since 2014, when Moscow
annexed Ukraine's Black Sea peninsula of Crimea and lent support to
separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine.
The West imposed economic and financial sanctions that battered the
rouble and the export-dependent economy. Moscow retaliated by banning
imports of Western food, which also hit ordinary Russians by spurring
inflation, and barred some individuals from entering Russia.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks to journalists following a
live nationwide broadcast call-in in Moscow, Russia June 15, 2017.
REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
The threat of a new wave of sanctions emerged this month as U.S.
policymakers backed the idea of punishing Russia for alleged
meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election and for supporting
Syria's government in the six-year-long civil war.
Putin had previously dismissed the proposed sanctions, saying they
reflected an internal political struggle in the United States, and
that Washington had always used such methods as a means of trying to
contain Russia.
(Reporting by Andrey Ostroukh; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)
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