WHY IT'S IMPORTANT
The letter sent on Sunday by U.S. Senators, Democrat Elizabeth
Warren and Republican Roger Marshall, to officials including
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin show increasing scrutiny on how cryptocurrencies could be
used to circumvent sanctions.
CONTEXT
Warren and Marshall raised particular concern about the use of
Tether, whose value is pegged to the U.S. dollar and designed to
maintain a stable value.
The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month that Russian
middlemen used Tether to evade Western sanctions in order to
source weapons parts for drones and other military equipment.
Reuters also reported this month that Venezuela's state-run oil
company PDVSA plans to use Tether in its crude and fuel exports
as the U.S. is set to reimpose oil sanctions on the country.
KEY QUOTE
"The national security threat posed by cryptocurrency requires a
commensurate response by our country's defense community,"
Warren and Marshall said. They noted that even though Tether's
preferred crypto trading platform Garantex has been sanctioned,
"it is not clear if these actions have stopped the flow of funds
through the platform."
THE RESPONSE
A Tether spokesperson said in a statement that every action with
the cryptocurrency is online and traceable, and "every asset can
be seized and every criminal can be caught."
"We work with law enforcement to do exactly that. Tether
respects the (Office of Foreign Assets Control and Specially
Designated Nationals) list and collaborates with more than 120
law enforcement agencies from 40 different countries, including
FBI, DOJ and the (U.S. Secret Service)," the spokesperson said.
(Reporting by Hannah Lang in New York; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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