WASHINGTON: The United States said Friday it will impose sanctions on foreign banks that support Russia’s war in Ukraine, in a new bid to exert pressure on Moscow as it diversifies from the West to China.
Under an executive order signed by President Joe Biden, the United States will slap so-called secondary sanctions against financial institutions that back companies already targeted for supporting Russia’s defense industry.
“We are sending an unmistakable message: anyone supporting Russia’s unlawful war effort is at risk of losing access to the US financial system,” Jake Sullivan, Biden’s national security adviser, said in a statement.
Sullivan said the new sanctions will “continue tightening the screws on Russia’s war machine and its enablers,” adding that earlier measures have “significantly degraded” Russia’s military, long seen as among the world’s most formidable and which in recent months has relied on imports from sanctioned North Korea and Iran.
But Russia since the start of the war has been rapidly working to reduce exposure to the West, shifting away from trade in dollars, euros, sterling and yen.
China’s largest banks meanwhile have extended billions of dollars worth of credit in renminbi to Russia since the war as Western institutions exit.
The action comes days after a European Union ban on Russian diamonds. The United States has already banned imports of Caspian Sea caviar since 2005 for conservation reasons.
The United States has been stepping up the use of secondary sanctions, despite concerns among some policymakers and experts that it will encourage other countries to move away from the dollar.