New US sanctions to plug loopholes that let Russia get Western tech

The US has announced a raft of new sanctions aimed at people and companies in countries, notably NATO member Turkey, that sell Western technology to Russia that could be used to bolster its war effort.

The US is slapping sanctions on more than 150 businesses and people from Russia to Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and Georgia to try to crack down on evasion and deny the Kremlin access to technology, money and financial channels that fuel President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine.

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The sanctions package is one of the biggest by the State and Treasury departments and is the latest to target people and companies in countries, notably NATO member Turkey, that sell Western technology to Russia that could be used to bolster its war effort.

The package also aims to hobble the development of Russia’s energy sector and future sources of cash, including Arctic natural gas projects, as well as mining and factories producing and repairing Russian weapons.

“The purpose of the action is to restrict Russia’s defense production capacity and to reduce the liquidity it has to pay for its war,” James O’Brien, head of the State Department’s Office of Sanctions Coordination, told the AP.

From Russia to Turkey to the UAE

The US is imposing sanctions on a newly established UAE company, which provides engineering and technology to Russia’s Arctic liquefied natural gas project, as well as multiple Russian companies involved in its development.

Putin wants the Arctic LNG 2 project to produce more liquefied natural gas and make Russia a bigger player in the energy market. In July, Putin visited the LNG site in Russia’s far north and said it would have a positive impact on “the entire economy.”

The US package includes sanctions on several Turkish and Russian companies that the State Department says help Moscow source US and European electronic components –such as computer chips and processors — that can be used in civilian and military equipment.

The department also is targeting Turkish companies that have provided ship repair services to a company affiliated with Russia’s Ministry of Defence.

Before the war, O’Brien said, Russia imported up to 90% of its electronics from countries that are part of the G7 wealthy democracies, but sanctions have dropped that figure closer to 30%.

Sanctions, he said, “are effective” and “put a ceiling on Russia’s wartime production capacity.”

“Russia is trying to run a full production wartime economy, and it is extremely difficult to do that with secretive episodic purchases of small batches of equipment from different places around the world,” O’Brien said.

However, analysts say Russia still has significant financial reserves available to pursue its war and it’s possible for Russia to import the technology it seeks in tiny batches to maintain defense production.

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“Russia could probably fill a large suitcase with enough electronic components to last for cruise missile production for a year,” said Richard Connolly, a specialist on Russia’s defense sector and economy at the risk analysis firm Oxford Analytica.

Russia, he said, also gets a lot of electronic components from Belarus, “so even if we whack all the moles, Belarus will still provide the equipment for as long as Lukashenko is in power.”

Both Turkey and the UAE have condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but have not joined Western sanctions and sought to maintain ties with Russia.

Russian Industry and Trade Minister Denis Manturov said this year that trade between Russia and the UAE grew by 68% to $9 billion in 2022, according to Russian state news agency Tass.

Are sanctions effective?

Despite countries still doing business with Russia, the State Department believes sanctions are working, O’Brien said, noting that “the way to measure success is on the battlefield.”

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“Ukraine can shoot down most of what the Russians are firing, and that tells us that there’s a gap,” he said. “The battlefield debris shows us Russia is using less capable electronics or sometimes no electronics at all.”

Nonetheless, Russia has been pummeling Ukraine with frequent missile attacks, including two over the past week that killed at least 23 people in Ukraine.

This is partly because Russia is “still getting hold of these electronic components and they are largely functioning as they did before,” said Connolly, the Russia analyst.

The latest sanctions package targets multiple Russian companies that repair, develop and manufacture weapons, including the Kalibr cruise missile. But to really turn the screws on Russia, analysts say Western companies need to think twice before selling crucial technology to countries known to have a healthy resale market with Russia.

“We need to work much harder with companies in our own countries to ensure that they are not feeding the re-export market,” said Tom Keatinge, director of the Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies at the Royal United Services Institute in London.

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“Many of them may be celebrating a rise in sales to the UAE or Turkey and not realising, or not choosing to realise, that the rise is being driven by re-export business as opposed to genuine business happening in the UAE and Turkey,” he said.

The United Arab Emirates has insisted it follows international laws when it comes to money laundering and sanctions. However, a global body focused on fighting money laundering has placed the UAE on its “grey list” over concerns that the global trade hub isn’t doing enough to stop criminals and militants from hiding wealth there.

Turkey, meanwhile, has tried to balance its close ties with both Russia and Ukraine, positioning itself as a mediator.

Turkey depends heavily on Russian energy and tourism. Last year, however, Turkey’s state banks suspended transactions through Russia’s payment system, Mir, over US threats of sanctions.

The extent of US sanctions

Including the latest sanctions, the State Department says the US has targeted almost 3,000 businesses and people since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

“The United States and its allies and partners are united in supporting Ukraine in the face of Russia’s unprovoked, unjustified and illegal war. We will stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes,” US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said in a statement.

The State Department also sanctioned a Russian citizen for being associated with the Wagner mercenary group and for facilitating shipping of weapons from North Korea to Russia.

Also targeted were a Russian oligarch who the State Department says has personal ties to Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and organised crime, as well as a Russian Intelligence Services officer and a Georgian-Russian oligarch. The State Department has said Russia’s Federal Security Service worked with the oligarch to influence Georgian society and politics for Russia’s benefit.

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The European Union should ban Russian tourist visas

By Mark Temnycky, Journalist, Nonresident Fellow, Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center

Vacations and foreign travel are luxuries, and preventing Russian citizens from going abroad would force them to think twice about their government’s actions, Mark Temnycky writes.

After scaling a mountain on a humid summer day, my cousins and I reached the top of St John Fortress in Kotor. We took a moment to enjoy the view from the summit, nearly 300 metres above the Montenegrin coastal town.

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After catching our breath, we reached into our bag and pulled out a Ukrainian flag. A customary tradition, we always take a photo with it during our annual trips.

We took a second to pose with our flag at the fortress and requested a neighbouring tourist to take our picture. 

But this encounter was different. As we stood for a photo, another group of tourists gave us unpleasant looks.

“Ukrainians,” one of them snarled in Russian, eyes cold with contempt.

We quickly finished taking our photo, packed our flag, and descended down the fortress. As our group continued on our walk, the discomfort among us became palpable as we came across additional Russian tourists who gave us similar stares.

Is everyone in Russia truly brainwashed?

Unfortunately, this was not an isolated incident. Following this encounter in Montenegro, I experienced similar events while in Cyprus and Greece. 

During my visits, Russian tourists did not shy away from glaring at me or making judgmental comments about my being Ukrainian.

This is Russia today. Over the past 19 months, many have mislabeled the Russian invasion of Ukraine as “Putin’s war,” blaming the current circumstances on the Russian president.

But the hatred toward Ukrainians goes far beyond Vladimir Putin. According to recent polling data, most Russians support their country’s aggression against Ukraine. 

Survey participants also stated that they want the war to continue. These are not opinions or expressions of a freedom-loving people.

Some might argue that Russian citizens are heavily influenced by Russian propaganda. After all, the Kremlin controls the media and survey centres within Russia. 

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But with a country of 143 million, it is hard to believe every single citizen has been brainwashed.

While Ukraine is burning, Russians head to the beach

Russia’s war has been devastating. Over the past 19 months, tens of thousands of Ukrainians have perished. Numerous cities and villages have been ravaged. 

Ukraine’s agriculture has been destroyed, and some experts believe that it will take over €1 trillion to rebuild the country.

To make matters worse, one-fourth of Ukraine’s population is displaced. The United Nations estimates that “90% of the refugees from Ukraine are women and children”. 

In addition, Ukraine has enforced martial law since the war began in February 2022, meaning men aged 18 to 60 cannot leave the country. 

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In short, these Ukrainian men, women, and children do not have an opportunity to go on vacation or extravagant adventures this summer. 

Instead, they constantly live in fear, trying to avoid the dangers of the ongoing Russian invasion.

While Ukrainians seek safety from these attacks, citizens from the aggressor state have been living in peace. According to a France24 report, 22.5 million Russian citizens travelled abroad in 2022, an increase of 3.4 million from 2021. 

As these tourists visited beach towns and major cities, this came at the expense of millions of Ukrainians who were constantly hiding in bunkers and shelters, ensuring they were away from Russian missile strikes.

There is something morally wrong with this. Why should Russian tourists have the privilege of going on their lavish European adventures while they support the atrocities committed by their country in Ukraine?

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Vacations are a luxury, after all

To be fair, the international community has already implemented harsh sanctions on Russia, such as the removal of several Russian banks from SWIFT, the expulsion of the Russian Federation from international groups such as the G20 and the Council of Europe, and a ban on Russian sports teams from international competitions. But more can be done.

Imposing restrictions on Russian tourist visas would send a powerful message to the Russians. 

To date, millions of citizens have been able to travel freely, presenting a false impression that the situation in Ukraine is normal. 

Instead, Russians should be punished for the actions of their government. 

Vacations and foreign travel are luxuries, and preventing Russian citizens from going abroad would force them to think twice about their government’s actions.

The EU remains divided on welcoming Russian guests

To some degree, the European Union has started to enforce restrictions. Countries such as Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Finland, and Poland have stated that they would “bar entry to Russians holding Schengen Area tourist visas”. 

These countries believe that Russians should not be permitted to travel to Europe while the unnecessary and illegal invasion continues. 

They also believe that additional pressures should be imposed on the Russian Federation to end the war.

But there is division within the EU. While those in Eastern Europe support stiffer penalties, the countries of Western Europe have a different attitude. 

According to a Euronews report, Germany, France, Portugal, and Spain believe Europe should not cut itself entirely from Russia. 

These opinions are ill-advised and only signal to the Russians that their government can continue to do as it pleases without harsher penalties.

There is also the issue of money laundering

Aside from the moral dilemma, banning Russian tourist visas would also combat the influx of dirty money in major European capitals. 

For years, European officials called on stricter laws to scrutinize Russian money laundering, tracing Russian money, and even implementing a task force to examine Russia’s financial influence in Europe. 

These efforts have been exhausted, and they are both slow and time-consuming.

Yet, implementing a visa policy that would restrict or ban Russian tourists in Europe would dramatically reduce the flow of Russian cash. 

In addition, European governments should continue to freeze and seize the assets of Russian politicians and oligarchs. 

This would help Europe in its fight against corruption, and it would lead to the continuation of anti-corruption efforts in major European capitals as they eliminate the use of Russian money.

It’s time to show that actions have consequences

The Russian Federation’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine has been deadly and catastrophic. 

But as Ukrainians continue to suffer, Russian citizens have reaped the benefits of European travel. It is time for the EU to take a harsher stance on Russian tourist visas. 

Russia should be penalised to the fullest extent for its war in Ukraine, and these punishments should not be eased until the war has ended, Ukraine’s 1991 borders are restored, and the country is rebuilt. 

Only then will the Russians learn from the consequences of their actions.

Vacations and international travel are a luxury, not a right. It is time to teach the Russians this.

Mark Temnycky is an accredited freelance journalist covering Eurasian affairs and a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center.

At Euronews, we believe all views matter. Contact us at [email protected] to send pitches or submissions and be part of the conversation.

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What are the West’s Russia sanctions missing?

Some conspicuous absences exist in the West’s sanctions regime against Russia, allowing it to contine raking in a fortune.

After Russian troops poured across Ukraine’s border in February last year, the West unleashed an unprecedented raft of sanctions on Russia – on a scale not seen since the dark days of the Cold War.

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A Yale University study from July 2022 claimed the sanctions, which targeted a sweep of industries and trades, were “catastrophically crippling” the Russian economy, citing the ruble’s collapse and mass exodus of Western firms.

The Russian economy has since shown resilience, however.

Its GDP – an indicator of economic health measuring the total value of goods and services a country produces – is predicted in a Reuters poll to rise 0.7% this year, all the while other European economies splutter and stagnate.

There are many reasons for Russia’s economic robustness. But some suggest one explanation is that sanctions have too many blindspots, loopholes and cracks, limiting their ability to hit Russia where it hurts – in the pocket. 

“There are plenty of gaps in the existing sanctions regime,” Tom Keatinge, Director of the Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies at Royal United Services Insitute, tells Euronews.

First up he highlights the “financial system” where “banking channels to deal with Russia” remain open in the West.

While these are ostensibly to pay for energy imports that are still allowed in some cases, Keatinge says transactions are “very hard to police”, suggesting payments for oil and gas could mask purchases of other items, such as high-tech military goods.

“If you are a bank, it can be hard to really know what the underlying trade a payment is connected to,” he explained. “Frankly, these remaining channels are overdue being closed down.”

The same goes for companies involved in other sectors with more of a humanitarian bent, such as food and pharmaceuticals, Keatinge continues. 

“There’s always a risk that a batch of medicines or similar being exported could act as a cover for something less benign.”

“I am not against leaving humanitarian loopholes if they are acknowledged and policed properly,” he adds.

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‘Bankrolling Russia’s war machine’

Another gap says the analyst is that many specific industries remain sanctions-free.

Diamonds are one such example. Though the United States and United Kingdom have applied restrictions, the European Union (EU) continually leaves the precious stones off its Russia sanctions list, now in their 11th incarnation. 

This allows the world’s biggest diamond producer continued access to one of its key markets.

“Governments are struggling to figure out how to close those loopholes in a way that isn’t too hard on their own pockets,” Keatinge tells Euronews, suggesting Belgium’s desire to protect its diamond industry helps explain the slow application of sanctions to the diamond industry.

Still, he cautions sanctions are a complex issue.

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Despite much “distasteful” trade carrying on, Keatinge notes some “is very challenging to cut, like the ongoing trade in nuclear fuel.”

The AP news agency reported in August Moscow was raking in hundreds of millions of euros selling nuclear fuel to the US and Europe, which are entirely dependent on Russian products.

Not slapping sanctions on some other goods, such as medicines for Russian civilians, also “makes perfect sense” as it could pose a “huge propaganda own goal” for the West, Keatinge adds.  

Fundamental to this issue are arguments about how sanctions work and their ultimate purpose – irrespective of what they target or not. 

“It is wrong to suggest sanctions are an all-or-nothing thing,” Keatinge emphasises.

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“It’s clearly not true that you have to sanction everything everywhere in order for them to have any effect,” he explains. “Lots of restrictions have been put in place. But the system does, nonetheless, have cracks, where money and trade, like water, will find its way through.”

“We need to limit the number of cracks to the greatest extent possible – and recognise that if they do exist they leave material gaps in our defences – but that doesn’t completely undermine the sanctions regime, they are clearly having an impact.”

‘It’s economic war’

While welcoming scrutiny of what was missing from the West’s sanctions regime, Mark Harrison, Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of Warwick, says the “important thing” was that there was one in the first place. 

“The real purpose of economic warfare is to ramp up costs for an adversary by forcing them to make adaptations,” he tells Euronews. “It is not possible to seal off the Russian economy.” 

“But what we can do is continually make it more expensive for Russia to maintain its ties with the rest of the world.”

“Modern economies are very tough targets. That doesn’t mean it’s not worth attacking them. It means countries need realism and patience,” he added. 

Russia’s prized fossil fuel revenues – upon which its economy depends –  dropped by more than a quarter in January 2023 compared to the previous year, according to the International Energy Agency.  

A final issue with the West’s sanctions regime the experts raise is that third countries aren’t covered. 

This means other states with more of an ambivalent position on the Ukraine war, such as Turkey, Kazakhstan and India, can act as intermediaries where sanctioned goods pass through their territory to or from Russia – circumventing the sanctions. 

“Many in Europe have overlooked the fact that the target of sanctions, Russia, doesn’t sit there and say okay,” says Keatinge. “They restructure and reorganise.” 

India has ramped up purchases of Russian crude oil, which some allege is sold as a refined product to help Moscow evade sanctions, according to a Euronews report in May.

New Delhi has defended itself, claiming it cannot pay for more expensive energy imports from countries beyond Russia with millions living in poverty.

“If you block off trade by one route, it just finds another way,” details Harrison, citing a historical example of World War One where exports were “simply rerouted” through neutral European countries after Britain imposed a naval blockade on Germany.

‘Some countries have a bad rep when it comes to sanctions’

Even amongst Western allies of Ukraine, Keatinge suggests sanctions lack “consistency”, with some countries buying petroleum products more actively than others, plus a few Russian banks can still use the SWIFT payment system.

“It doesn’t make a mockery of the sanctions, but it certainly makes it far more difficult to have any certainty the restrictions are being properly imposed,” he told Euronews.

Led by ultra-nationalist Viktor Orban, Hungary has gained notoriety for continuing to purchase Russian energy, while some worry sanctions fatigue is gripping Austria, with one political party saying last October restrictions should be put to a referendum.

“Sanctions are a political tool,” Keatinge tells Euronews. “If the leadership in your country is not putting out strong messaging on sanctions, then why would industry feel the need to comply.”

The EU signalled in July that its sanctions against Russia will build over time, with the bloc seeking to patch holes and curb new loopholes as and when they arise. 

These could extend to penalising countries that aid Russia, though this is not certain. 

“It’s a war of attrition,” says Harrison. “By subjecting Russia to costly workarounds and stretching its resources, we weaken the country both at home and on the battlefield.” 

“That’s the point. That’s the purpose here.”



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Pregnant and scammed: The Russians flying to Argentina to have babies

Olga wonders how well she’ll have to integrate into local society. Nastya wants to know if any other expectant mothers will travel in June. Valentina is concerned about living in a time zone far from Russia, and how inconvenient it would be to work remotely.

These are just some of the Russian women who posted on popular forums for “baby tourism” – a phenomenon that has been growing since the Kremlin launched an invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. 

Since then, authorities say thousands of young Russians have flown to South America, Argentina in particular, where they don’t need a visa to enter the country, and where their babies are guaranteed a less restrictive foreign passport.

The Moscow-Buenos Aires route is also an easier way for the mothers to acquire local nationality. But now officials are concerned about the sheer scale of the problem after one Ethiopian Airlines flight landed in February with 33 pregnant Russian women on board.

A Euronews investigation has uncovered the network of Russian travel agencies and support services that charge up to $35,000 (€32,840) to pregnant Russian women and make false promises that lawyers say are tantamount to criminal activity.

“The second fastest passport in the world for parents!”

Those Russian-owned businesses typically advertise Argentina as having “the second fastest passport in the world for parents,” and there’s money to be made in their services. 

RuArgentina is a website which offers information and assistance to Russian women who are interested in going to Argentina to give birth.

For $100 (€94) you can get a phone consultation to ask questions about the process; and for $5500 (€5187) you get access to the “Economy Class” package which includes meetings with doctors, and some documents for the child. 

And this is where lawyers say false information about the process is being peddled, and Russian families are being conned. 

RuArgentina’s website promises “citizenship for parents immediately upon birth of child” in Argentina – and also says there’s no necessity to live in the country to obtain citizenship. Those two claims are false information.

Christian Rubilar is an attorney who represented multiple Russian women in their citizenship cases, and says that RuArgentina misleads people seeking citizenship.

He tells Euronews that he filed a complaint against RuArgentina, denouncing them as a criminal organisation because “they promise they can get citizenship for the parents, even if you leave [Argentina] and don’t come back. This is absolutely not true.”

“I believe we should talk about criminal organisations because these are not law firms, these are not travel agencies,” Rubilar tells Euronews.

Deeper in RuArgentina’s website there is more accurate information about the Argentinian citizenship process, but the ‘shop window’ of the website which advertises their services, is patently misleading.

Euronews contacted the company’s founder, Kirill Makoveev, a Russian businessman who has lived in Argentina since 2014, but he declined to answer questions, citing an ongoing police investigation into his business operations. 

“A million-dollar business and illicit network”

Argentinian authorities are cracking down on the “baby tourism” industry, carrying out police raids on multiple locations in Buenos Aires during February. 

Criminal investigations have been opened into several companies, including RuArgentina, says lawyer Christian Rubilar. 

However, despite the legal woes, RuArgentina is still advertising its misleading services for Russian women, and there have been no new visa immigration controls imposed on Russian passengers who wish to enter Argentina. 

Rubilar explains that this is due to the constitution that protects anyone who wishes to live in Argentina; and changing the Constitution would be a drawn-out process. 

Meanwhile, Argentinian newspaper La Nación reports that another inquiry has been underway since December to probe a “million-dollar business and illicit network” run by a married Russian couple Ruslan Yuslashev and Elena Kuklina. 

They are suspected of delivering fake documents for Argentinian citizenship in record time to Russian nationals. Police reportedly found a large amount of money, and seized laptops and phones, at the couple’s home.

Why do Russians want to go to Argentina to give birth?

There’s no doubt how much more valuable an Argentinian passport is than a Russian one, especially after a raft of travel sanctions were imposed on Russia by the international community.

Immigration laws allow Russians to enter Argentina and settle without a visa. Children born on Argentinian soil benefit from free healthcare and automatic citizenship: and it’s then easier for the parents to obtain citizenship too.

An Argentinian passport allows entry to 171 countries without a visa – a very attractive option when a Russian passport only allows visa-free travel to 87 countries.

“The doctors here are cheaper,” says Alya Lykhina, a Russian who arrived in Argentina in May 2022.

“That’s nice and it’s not so difficult to get documents. The process is very clear.”

Aleksei and his wife Dina had their daughter Emilia in Argentina last June. They are also delighted with healthcare quality and their future Argentinian passport “but that was not the real reason why we moved from Russia,” he says. “The real reason was the war.”

Since January 2022, more than 10,500 pregnant Russian women entered the country, figures show.

“The numbers have been increasing in the last few months,” Florencia Carignano, the national director for migration in Argentina, to a local news channel.

“In the last three months, 5,819 women who were about to give birth entered.”

“They don’t need to spend any money”

Not every Russian couple who goes to South America to have a baby uses one of the controversial travel agency services. 

“We didn’t use any of these agencies,” says Anatolyy, who flew to Buenos Aires with his wife Irina, who is already nine months pregnant.

“We do not understand why people would use these kinds of services as Russians can come to Argentina without a visa and stay 90 days,” he tells Euronews.

Russians don’t need to spend big money to come to Argentina and to apply to eventually get citizenship – even with a lawyer, the costs would likely be around 10% of what the agencies are charging. 

Anatolyy and Irina were able to manage almost everything by themselves, “the only struggle was to find an apartment,” he says.

“Now we’re in a hotel, and expecting the baby anytime soon.”



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