Biden ramps up Russia sanctions as West fears fall of Kyiv

President Biden imposed stiff sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine as Western nations warned that Kyiv could fall within hours. 

As Russian tanks, troops and aircraft pushed closer to Ukraine’s capital city, Biden, speaking to the nation from the White House, promised to inflict a “severe cost on the Russian economy” that will hamper its ability to do business in foreign currencies.

“This is a dangerous moment for all of Europe,” Biden said, adding that the “next few weeks and months will be hard on the people of Ukraine.” 

President Joe Biden
President Biden's options are said to include cutting Russia’s top banks from the financial system and imposing sanctions on Putin himself. Kicking Russia out of the messaging system used for financial transactions called Swift would be a more extreme step.
Bloomberg News

The Russian military effectively eliminated Ukraine’s air defenses and rapidly advanced across the neighboring country, meaning Kyiv could quickly be overrun as well, a senior Western intelligence official said.

After weeks of warnings that an attack would bring about a “massive” economic response, Biden announced that the U.S. would sanction Sberbank — Russia’s largest lender — and four other financial institutions that represent an estimated $1 trillion in assets, as well as a broad swath of Russian elites and their family members. 

“The sanctions we imposed exceed anything that’s ever been done,” Biden said. “The sanctions we imposed have generated two-thirds of the world joining us. They are profound sanctions.”

At the same time, Biden made clear that Western powers, for all their desire to inflict punishment on Putin, were not willing to sacrifice their own economies to do so. He said restrictions on currency clearing would include carve-outs for energy payments, a crucial source of revenue for Russia. Banning such sales would likely crater global energy markets and cause shortages in Europe.

To cushion the impact of the conflict and fresh sanctions on Americans, Biden said the U.S. will release additional barrels of oil from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve as conditions warrant. The U.S. already authorized the release of 50 million barrels of crude from the reserve last year, well before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. 

“I will do everything in my power to limit the pain the American people are feeling at the gas pump,” Biden said. “This is critical to me.”

U.S. stocks pared losses while the dollar and yen jumped and the euro and commodity-linked currencies retreated. The U.S. will also implement export controls designed to cut Russia off from semiconductors and other advanced technology crucial to the military, biotechnology, and aerospace industries. Rules allow the U.S. to restrict exports to Russia from anywhere in the world using American technology, including software.

Russia’s largest state-owned enterprises also will be blocked from raising money from U.S. and European investors, Biden said.

“As a result of Putin’s war of choice, Russia will face immediate and intense pressure on its economy, and massive costs from its isolation from the global financial system, global trade, and cutting-edge technology,” the White House said in a statement after the president’s speech.

In a decision that may prompt criticism on Capitol Hill, Biden said Russia will not be barred from the Swift international banking network because Europe opposed that action. But the sanctions imposed Thursday against major Russian banks should have a similar effect and limit Russia’s ability to do business in dollars, euros, and pounds, he said.

Earlier, the U.K. unveiled the its biggest ever set of sanctions against Russia, targeting the country’s banks, billionaires and national air carrier in response to the invasion of Ukraine. The penalties extended to Belarus, which hosted tens of thousands of Russian troops ahead of last night’s invasion. 

The latest round of sanctions follow the administration’s decision Wednesday to target the company that built the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline from Russia to Germany. That came on top of other penalties announced Tuesday following Putin’s recognition of breakaway territories in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine as independent states. The U.S. leader said the slew of sanctions were a long-term tool to pressure Putin and were never expected to prevent an attack. The penalties will “take time,” adding “he’s going to test the resolve of the West to see if we stand together and we will.”

But in launching Russia’s most sweeping military action in decades, Putin has defied global condemnation and new rounds of sanctions. Putin has threatened other countries that may interfere with his Ukraine offensive with historic consequences.  Putin’s audacity is a troubling development for Biden and European allies. The stakes are high for Biden, who has promised to uphold the postwar geopolitical order that Russia’s offensive now threatens. The president said action was needed now because Putin “has much larger ambitions than Ukraine.”

“He wants to reestablish the former Soviet Union,” Biden said. “His ambitions are completely contrary to the place where the rest of the world has arrived.”

Bloomberg News
Politics and policy
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