Russia reels, denounces new U.S. sanctions as illegal,
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[August 09, 2018]
By Andrew Osborn
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia condemned a new
round of U.S. sanctions as illegal on Thursday after news of the
measures sent the rouble tumbling to two-year lows and sparked a wider
asset sell-off over fears that Moscow was locked in a spiral of
never-ending curbs by the West.
Moscow has been trying with mixed success to improve battered
U.S.-Russia ties since Donald Trump won the White House in 2016, and
Russia's political elite was quick to chalk up a summit last month
between Trump and Vladimir Putin as a victory.
But initial triumphalism swiftly turned sour as anger over what some
U.S. lawmakers saw as an over deferential performance by Trump and his
failure to confront Putin over Moscow's alleged meddling in U.S.
politics galvanized a new sanctions push.
Having bet heavily on improving ties with Washington via Trump, Moscow
now finds that Trump is under mounting pressure from U.S. lawmakers to
show he is tough on Russia ahead of mid-term elections.
In the latest broadside, the U.S. State Department said on Wednesday it
would impose fresh sanctions by the month's end after determining that
Moscow had used a nerve agent against a former Russian double agent,
Sergei Skripal, and his daughter, Yulia, in Britain, something Moscow
denies.
In an early reaction, the Kremlin said the sanctions were illegal and
unfriendly and that the U.S. move was at odds with the "constructive
atmosphere" of Trump and Putin's encounter in Helsinki.
The new sanctions come in two tranches. The first, which targets U.S.
exports of sensitive national-security related goods, comes with deep
exemptions and many of the items it covers have already been banned by
previous restrictions.
However, the second tranche, activated after 90 days if Moscow fails to
provide "reliable assurances" it will no longer use chemical weapons and
allow on-site inspections by the United Nations or other international
observer groups, is more serious.
NBC, citing U.S. officials, said the second tranche could include
downgrading diplomatic relations, suspending the state airline
Aeroflot's ability to fly to the United States and cutting off nearly
all exports and imports.
The State Department's announcement fueled already worsening investor
sentiment about the possible impact of more sanctions on Russian assets
and the rouble at one point slid by over 1 percent against the dollar,
hitting a two-year low, before recouping some of its losses.
The U.S. move also triggered a sell-off in Russian government bonds and
the dollar-denominated RTS index fell to its lowest since April 11.
"There is local panic on the currency market," BCS Brokerage said in a
note. "At times, the number of those who want to ditch the rouble is
becoming so high so there is not enough liquidity."
ILLEGAL
The Kremlin said the new sanctions were "illegal and do not correspond
to international law."
"...Such decisions taken by the American side are absolutely unfriendly
and can hardly be somehow associated with the constructive - not simple
but constructive - atmosphere that there was at the last meeting of the
two presidents," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
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National flags of Russia and the U.S. fly at Vnukovo International
Airport in Moscow, Russia April 11, 2017. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov/File
Photo
Washington had become an unpredictable player on the international
stage, Peskov added, saying "anything could be expected" from it and
that it was important that Russia's financial system, which he described
as stable, was prepared.
In a sign the Kremlin was not eager to escalate an already difficult
situation however, Peskov said it was too early to talk about Russian
counter measures.
He criticized the U.S. decision to link the sanctions to the British
nerve agent case, an incident the Kremlin has long cast as a Western
plot to damage its reputation and provide a pretext for more sanctions.
Skripal, a former colonel in Russia's GRU military intelligence service,
and his 33-year-old daughter were found slumped unconscious on a bench
in the southern English city of Salisbury in March after a liquid form
of the Novichok type of nerve agent was applied to his home's front
door.
European countries and the United States expelled 100 Russian diplomats
after the attack, in the strongest action by Trump against Russia since
he came to office.
Konstantin Kosachyov, head of the upper house of parliament's
international affairs committee, was cited by the Interfax news agency
as saying it looked like Washington was now behaving like "a police
state."
Dmitri Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center and a former
colonel in the Russian army, said the State Department's move looked
like the latest salvo in what he called a hybrid war.
"Sanctions are the U.S. weapon of choice," Trenin wrote on Twitter.
"They are not an instrument, but the policy itself. Russia will have to
brace for more to come over the next several years, prepare for the
worst and push back where it can."
At variance with Moscow over Ukraine and Syria, Western sanctions have
already drastically reduced Western involvement in Russian energy and
commodities projects, including large scale financing and exploration of
hard-to-recover and deep water resources.
Proposed U.S. legislation prepared by several senators calls on Trump to
widen the sanctions further to include virtually all Russian energy
projects and effectively bar Western companies from any involvement in
the country.
Introduced by Republican and Democratic senators last week in draft
form, Senator Lindsey Graham, one of the measure's lead sponsors, has
called it "the sanctions bill from hell."
(Additional reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov, Tom Balmforth, Denis Pinchuk,
Andrey Ostroukh; Editing by Richard Balmforth)
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