The United States and allied countries have responded to Russia's invasion of Ukraine with a host of sanctions and other economic measures.Footnote 1 According to officials, U.S. President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and his administration prepared “sanctions with massive consequences” in the event of an invasion, with plans to “start at the top of the escalation ladder and stay there.”Footnote 2 After the invasion of Ukraine commenced, the United States and allied countries imposed sanctions they had planned and previewed, including sanctions against Russian banks and oligarchs. Among other measures, the United States also imposed export controls against Russia and restricted Russia's ability to pay outstanding debts with dollars held in U.S. banks. Many private companies have also withdrawn from or limited their operations in Russia in response to the invasion, increasing the economic fallout for Russia. Although the economic measures appear to be damaging the Russian economy, their ability to change Russia's behavior in Ukraine remains unclear.
When Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized two regions of Ukraine as the independent Donetsk People's Republic (DNR) and Luhansk People's Republic (LNR) on February 21, 2022, the United States acted swiftly to sanction Russia. Biden issued Executive Order 14,065, finding that the “purported recognition” of the DNR and LNR regions “contradicts Russia's commitments under the Minsk agreements [signed in 2014 and 2015] and further threatens the peace, stability, sovereignty, and territorial integrity of Ukraine.”Footnote 3 The order prohibited “new investment in the so-called DNR or LNR regions” and the exportation and importation of “any goods, services, or technology” to or from those regions.Footnote 4 In addition, the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned “two major Russian state-owned financial institutions, impos[ed] additional restrictions on Russian sovereign debt, and sanction[ed] five Kremlin-connected elites.”Footnote 5 Specifically, the financial institutions sanctioned were Corporation Bank for Development and Foreign Economic Affairs Vnesheconombank (VEB), which “is crucial to Russia's ability to raise funds,” and Promsvyazbank Public Joint Stock Company (PSB), which “is critical to Russia's defense sector.”Footnote 6
European allies also took almost immediate action in response. On February 23, the European Union (EU) imposed “restrictive measures,” including “an asset freeze and a prohibition from making funds available to” members of Russia's legislature, the Duma, who voted in favor of Putin's action, as well as to “27 high profile individuals and entities” that “played a role in undermining or threatening the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of Ukraine.”Footnote 7 The EU also imposed a travel ban on these persons.Footnote 8 At the same time, the EU announced “an import ban on goods from the non-government controlled areas of the Donetsk and Luhansk [regions], restrictions on trade and investments related to certain economic sectors, a prohibition to supply tourism services, and an export ban for certain goods and technologies.”Footnote 9 Media characterized the initial U.S. and European steps as “cautious,” as they “appeared intended to allow the United States and its European allies to hold in reserve the most aggressive sanctions they have threatened to impose” in response to a “full-scale assault.”Footnote 10
After Russia further invaded Ukraine on February 24, the United States, the EU, and other countries launched a massive program of economic sanctions and other measures against Russia.Footnote 11 Even traditionally neutral Switzerland imposed sanctions, “saying it would fully embrace the European Union measures against Russia.”Footnote 12 Some of the measures aimed to cut Russia off from the international financial system. The U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned “Russia's two largest financial institutions,” Sberbank and VTB Bank, both of which are majority-owned by the Russian government and “which combined make up more than half of the total banking system in Russia by asset value.”Footnote 13 OFAC imposed full blocking sanctions on VTB as well as three other financial institutions, meaning that their “assets held in U.S. financial institutions [would] be instantly frozen and inaccessible to the Kremlin.”Footnote 14 The sanctions imposed on Sberbank were more limited so-called “correspondent and payable-through account sanctions,” designed to “restrict Sberbank's access to transactions made in the dollar.”Footnote 15
On February 26, Canada, the European Commission, France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States issued a joint statement announcing that they are “commit[ted] to ensuring that selected Russian banks are removed from the SWIFT messaging system,” which “will ensure that these banks are disconnected from the international financial system and harm their ability to operate globally.”Footnote 16 The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) “delivers secure messages among more than 11,000 financial institutions and companies in over 200 countries and territories, handling trillions of dollars in transactions.”Footnote 17 SWIFT is operated by “the National Bank of Belgium in partnership with other major central banks, including the U.S. Federal Reserve System, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank,”Footnote 18 and because it “is incorporated under Belgian law,” it “must comply with EU regulations.”Footnote 19 The countries issuing the statement also “commit[ted] to imposing restrictive measures that will prevent the Russian Central Bank from deploying its international reserves in ways that undermine the impact of . . . sanctions.”Footnote 20 Following the joint statement, the U.S. Treasury Department banned “United States persons from engaging in transactions with the Central Bank of the Russian Federation, the National Wealth Fund of the Russian Federation, and the Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation” thus “immobiliz[ing] any assets of the Central Bank . . . held in the United States or by U.S. persons, wherever located.”Footnote 21 The countries did not take the further step of completely blocking Russia from SWIFT, a point that became a source of “serious Western division,” with “Eastern European countries and France” supporting a complete cut-off.Footnote 22
As Russia continued military operations against Ukraine in the weeks following the invasion, the Biden administration took other economic actions against Russia. In addition to targeting financial institutions, the Biden administration on March 8 banned investments in Russia's energy sector,Footnote 23 and then on March 11, Biden issued Executive Order 14,068, broadening the ban to include “new investment in any sector of the Russian Federation economy as may be determined by the Secretary of the Treasury.”Footnote 24
Further economic penalties include a host of export and import controls aimed at weakening vital industries and increasing long-term pressure on Russia's economy. On February 24, the U.S. Commerce Department implemented a “sweeping series of stringent export controls that will severely restrict Russia's access to technologies and other items that it needs to sustain its aggressive military capabilities.”Footnote 25 Specifically, the controls “target Russia's defense, aerospace, and maritime sectors and will cut off Russia's access to vital technological inputs, atrophy key sectors of its industrial base, and undercut its strategic ambitions to exert influence on the world stage.”Footnote 26 The Commerce Department noted that the “measures . . . reflect momentous cooperation among the United States, the European Union (EU), Japan, Australia, United Kingdom, Canada, and New Zealand, with more expected to join, in aligning on export control policies and requirements.”Footnote 27
Other import bans and export controls have followed. On March 11, Executive Order 14,068 banned the importation of “fish, seafood, and preparations thereof; alcoholic beverages; non-industrial diamonds; and any other products of Russian Federation origin as may be determined by the Secretary of the Treasury,” as well as “the exportation, reexportation, sale, or supply . . . of luxury goods” to Russia.Footnote 28 The order also banned exports or supply of U.S. dollar-denominated banknotes to Russia.Footnote 29 On April 1, the Commerce Department added 96 Russian entities to the Entity List,Footnote 30 a list of institutions, businesses, organizations, and individuals “that are subject to specific license requirements for the export, reexport and/or transfer (in-country) of specified items.”Footnote 31 The listed entities included “military end-users” and others that “acquir[ed] and attempt[ed] to acquire items . . . in support of Russia's military modernization efforts.”Footnote 32 The Department described the listings as an attempt “to degrade Russian . . . defense, aerospace, maritime, and other strategic sectors in response to Russia's brutal assault on the sovereignty of Ukraine.”Footnote 33
The United States has also taken a number of actions targeting Russia's energy sector. On March 4, the United States “target[ed] Russia's oil refining sector with new stringent export controls,” which covered “a wide variety of items necessary for refining oil.”Footnote 34 Biden went further on March 8, banning the importation into the United States of Russian “crude oil; petroleum; petroleum fuels, oils, and products of their distillation; liquefied natural gas [LNG]; coal; and coal products.”Footnote 35 Although Biden had been hesitant to ban Russian energy imports, fearing “accelerating the already rapid rise in the price of gasoline,”Footnote 36 the administration noted that the action had “widespread bipartisan support” and would “further deprive President Putin of the economic resources he uses to continue his needless war of choice.”Footnote 37 Then in April, Congress overwhelmingly passed, and Biden signed into law, the Ending Importation of Russian Oil Act, which authorized Biden's previously announced ban on Russian energy imports.Footnote 38 The Act authorizes the president to terminate the ban, subject to a report-and-wait provision, only if he certifies to Congress that Russia has reached an agreement, accepted by the “free and independent government of Ukraine,” to withdraw its forces and cease hostilities, “poses no immediate military threat of aggression to any [NATO] member,” and “recognizes the right of the people of Ukraine to independently and freely choose their own government.”Footnote 39
Although many U.S. sanctions have been tightly coordinated with allies who have imposed their own parallel measures, actions targeting Russian energy have proven more controversial. The EU in particular is dependent on Russian energy sources: in 2019, Russia supplied the EU with 27 percent of its crude oil imports, 41 percent of its natural gas imports, and 47 percent of its solid fuel imports.Footnote 40 However, European countries have taken steps to shift away from Russian energy. Germany halted its authorization of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that would have sent LNG from Russia to Germany—a move that “surprised many European leaders.”Footnote 41 When the United States announced its ban on importing Russian energy products, the United Kingdom and European Commission also pledged to become independent from Russian energy by the end of 2022 and in the coming years, respectively, though the promises “fell short of . . . Biden's ban.”Footnote 42 The United States has asked both domestic and foreign LNG producers to reroute to Europe, but “no single country can replace Russian supplies to Europe, with most volumes tied to long-term supply contracts.”Footnote 43 The United States has nonetheless tried to ease the burden on Europe by promising to “send an additional 15 billion cubic meters of liquefied natural gas to Europe this year—roughly 10 to 12 percent of current annual U.S. exports to all countries.”Footnote 44 On May 4, the European Commission announced plan to “phase out [the EU's] Russian supply of crude oil within six months and refined products by the end of the year,”Footnote 45 but the plan required the approval of all EU member states, some of which opposed the proposal.Footnote 46 On May 31, the EU agreed on a compromise: banning imports of Russian oil arriving by sea by the end of 2022, but allowing imports by pipeline to continue for now to appease concerns by Hungary and other countries.Footnote 47
Broader trade-related actions against Russia have garnered greater unity among allies. On March 11, Biden announced that he would seek to revoke Russia's most-favored-nation (MFN) status, ending “permanent and normal trade relations” with the country in what he called “‘another crushing blow to Russia's economy’”Footnote 48 Revocation of MFN status “enable[s] the [United States] to impose higher tariffs on Russian goods.”Footnote 49 With a unanimous vote in the Senate and vote of 420 to 3 in the House, Congress passed, and Biden signed into law on April 8, the Suspending Normal Trade Relations with Russia and Belarus Act, officially revoking the two countries’ MFN status.Footnote 50 The act also authorizes “an expansion of the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act,” allowing “the Biden administration to impose further sanctions on Russian officials for human rights violations.”Footnote 51
As Biden announced the revocation of Russia's trade status, the Group of Seven (G7) leaders and the EU also announced joint actions aimed at hindering Russia's ability to engage in trade—making the country “a global economic and financial pariah.”Footnote 52 The G7 leaders pledged to “revoke important benefits of Russia's membership of the World Trade Organization and ensure that the products of Russian companies no longer receive Most-Favoured-Nation treatment in [their] economies.”Footnote 53 In addition, the G7 noted that it would work to “ensure Russia cannot obtain financing from the leading multilateral financial institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.”Footnote 54 On March 14, the United States and fellow World Trade Organization (WTO) members, including the EU, Japan, and South Korea, doubled down on the threat, stating
We will take any actions, as WTO Members, that we each consider necessary to protect our essential security interests. These may include actions in support of Ukraine, or actions to suspend concessions or other obligations with respect to the Russian Federation, such as the suspension of most-favoured-nation treatment to products and services of the Russian Federation.Footnote 55
It is unlikely that WTO members will expel Russia because there is no “provision explicitly authorizing expulsion,” and it is much less complex for each WTO member to “break off preferential trade relations” individually.Footnote 56
The United States and at least thirty-two other countries have also limited travel from Russia by blocking Russian planes from entering their airspace.Footnote 57 On February 27, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced “that the entire 27-nation bloc's airspace will now be closed to Russian-owned, -registered or -controlled aircraft, ‘including the private jets of oligarchs.’”Footnote 58 In his State of the Union speech on March 1, President Biden similarly announced that the United States would “join our allies in closing off American air space to all Russian flights—further isolating Russia—and adding an additional squeeze on their economy.”Footnote 59 The next day, the U.S. Department of Transportation and Federal Aviation Administration issued “orders blocking Russian aircraft and airlines from entering and using all domestic U.S. airspace . . . effectively closing U.S. air space to all Russian commercial air carriers and other Russian civil aircraft.”Footnote 60 The United States subsequently banned “Russian-affiliated vessels from entering into United States ports,” subject to limited exceptions.Footnote 61
The United States has also targeted individuals, including Putin himself and oligarchs close to him. On February 24, shortly after the full-scale invasion commenced, the United States levied sanctions on oligarchs “close to Putin” working in government and the financial sector who “continue to leverage their proximity to the Russian President to pillage the Russian state, enrich themselves, and elevate their family members into some of the highest positions of power in the country at the expense of the Russian people.”Footnote 62 The next day, the United States “in coordination with allies and partners . . . impos[ed] sanctions on President . . . Vladimir Putin and the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sergei Lavrov, as well as other members of Russia's Security Council.”Footnote 63 The Treasury Department noted that “[i]t is exceedingly rare for Treasury to designate a head of state; President Putin joins a very small group that includes despots such as Kim Jong Un, Alyaksandr Lukashenka, and Bashar al-Assad.”Footnote 64 Despite the announcement, it was “not immediately clear which assets—and in which countries—the Biden administration plan[ned] on targeting.”Footnote 65
The Treasury Department continued to sanction individuals in the following months. For example, on March 11, the department sanctioned “regime elites and business executives who are associates and facilitators of the Russian regime, including three immediate family members of President Putin's spokesperson, Dmitriy Sergeevich Peskov; Russian tycoon and Kremlin insider Viktor Vekselberg; and the Management Board of the sanctioned VTB Bank.”Footnote 66 On March 24, the United States levied additional sanctions on Russian elites and on more than three hundred members of the Duma.Footnote 67 Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen condemned the Duma for “continu[ing] to support Putin's invasion, stifl[ing] the free flow of information, and infring[ing] on the basic rights of the citizens of Russia.”Footnote 68 Fearing that oligarchs will skirt sanctions, the United States and its allies also committed to limit “golden passports” which “let wealthy Russians connected to the Russian government become citizens of [other] countries and gain access to [their] financial systems.”Footnote 69
In order to enforce sanctions against oligarchs and other individuals, the U.S. Department of Justice launched Task Force KleptoCapture,Footnote 70 and joined the multilateral “Russian Elites, Proxies, and Oligarchs” (REPO) task force,Footnote 71 along with Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the EU.Footnote 72 The EU has also launched the “Freeze and Seize” Task Force to complement REPO's work.Footnote 73 Among the more high-profile actions to date have been seizures of yachts around the world linked to sanctioned Russians.Footnote 74
In addition to sanctioning Russia, the United States and allies have also sanctioned Belarus due to Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko's support of Putin and assistance in Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Belarus was already subject to a variety of EU and U.S. sanctions imposed in response to the regime's repression of protestors and political dissidents after a disputed August 2020 election as well as the May 2021 diversion of a Ryanair flight to arrest a dissident on board.Footnote 75 On February 24, the U.S. Treasury Department cited “Belarus's support for, and facilitation of, the [Russian] invasion” in sanctioning two dozen Belarusian individuals and entities with ties to “Belarus's defense sector and financial institutions,” sectors “in which Belarus has especially close ties to Russia.”Footnote 76 Yellen further emphasized that “due to the interconnectedness between” Russia and Belarus, U.S. sanctions on Russia “will also impose severe economic pain on the Lukashenka regime.”Footnote 77 The United States has also extended the export controls imposed on Russia to Belarus in order to “prevent the diversion of items, including technology and software, in the defense, aerospace, and maritime sectors to Russia through Belarus,”Footnote 78 and similarly included Belarus alongside Russia in the ban on import and export of luxury goods.Footnote 79 On March 15, the United States sanctioned Lukashenko and his immediate family members for his involvement in human rights violations and corruption, while also citing Belarus's support of Russia's invasion.Footnote 80 The United Kingdom, EU, and Canada have similarly sanctioned Belarus and Belarusian officials for supporting Russia's invasion.Footnote 81 These governments, joined by a broader group including, among others, Australia, Moldova, Norway, Japan, South Korea, and the United States, also released a statement at the WTO stating that “in light of Belarus’ material support to the actions of the Russian Federation, we consider that its accession process [to the WTO] is suspended and will not participate in any accession-related work.”Footnote 82
Beyond governments, many private companies have responded to the invasion by withdrawing from Russia, restricting access to their goods or services in Russia, or otherwise curtailing their normal operations.Footnote 83 The need to comply with sanctions and export controls prompted some of these moves, but others go beyond what sanctions require, resting instead on reputational concerns with continuing to do business in Russia.Footnote 84
The withdrawals from Russia have come from a broad swath of companies and other institutions. For example, Mastercard and Visa “suspend[ed] operations . . . , essentially severing cardholders [in Russia] from transactions outside the country.”Footnote 85 Technology companies, including Microsoft, Apple, and IBM, have ceased selling to Russia and have taken other actions, including, in Apple's case, removing Russian state media applications from its app store.Footnote 86 Key hardware manufacturers have moved to comply with new export controls, with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company and Intel, two of the world's largest computer chip producers, taking actions to prevent Russian access to their products.Footnote 87 International sports and cultural institutions have also taken measures against Russia. For example, the International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) suspended Russian teams, and the Eurovision Song Contest and Cannes Film Festival blocked Russian participation.Footnote 88
Social media platforms and the tech companies that own them have faced a particularly difficult situation. Russia has cracked down on independent information, including “blocking Facebook and Instagram entirely,”Footnote 89 and passed a censorship law under which “journalists, website operators and others risk 15 years in prison for publishing ‘misinformation’ about the war on Ukraine.”Footnote 90 Ukrainian officials and other governments, on the other hand, have pressured platforms to block Russian government and state-affiliated media accounts.Footnote 91 In response, Twitter, for example, has added labels to tweets indicating links to Russian government and state-owned media accounts and “withhold[s] certain state-affiliated media content in EU member states,” as required by EU sanctions, Footnote 92 but neither Twitter nor other platforms have banned such accounts entirely.Footnote 93
Some of the companies have faced pressure to continue serving Russian customers. Telegram, for example, considered blocking “war-related channels” but reversed course after users expressed concern about losing an independent source of information.Footnote 94 Some civil liberties groups and U.S. officials reportedly encouraged Apple and Google to continue to allow Russians to access their app stores so that Russians can download virtual private network and encrypted communications apps, and they have encouraged Cloudflare, which provides cybersecurity services to websites, to remain in Russia.Footnote 95 When asked about Cloudflare in particular, a U.S. State Department spokesperson said, “It is critical to maintain the flow of information to the people of Russia to the fullest extent possible.”Footnote 96
Some of the most significant exits from Russia have come from energy companies. Companies such as ExxonMobil, Shell, and BP have announced various steps to divest from Russia, including exiting long-term joint ventures and stakes in Russian oil companies that will force them to leave billions of dollars behind.Footnote 97 For example, BP's exit from its $14 billion stake in Russian oil giant Rosneft “marks the end of one of the Western world's largest investments in Russia.”Footnote 98 Shell demonstrated the risks of failing to take action: it faced criticism for purchasing Russian crude oil after the invasion, and then reversed course, stating that it was “acutely aware that our decision . . . was not the right one and we are sorry.”Footnote 99
Companies’ withdrawals from Russia are expected to exacerbate the impact of sanctions on Russia's economy.Footnote 100 One commentator asserted that “it is the unilateral decisions of Western companies to pull out of Russia or break their contracts with Russian companies (when the sanctions are not requiring them to do so) that is driving [the] Russian economy into a very deep economic hole.”Footnote 101 Another observer pointed out that “[t]he more companies that take these actions . . . the greater the pressure on other companies to act likewise.”Footnote 102 Despite such pressure, some Western companies, including Koch Industries, Lacoste, and Riot Games, are so far maintaining their operations in Russia.Footnote 103
As the conflict has worn on, the United States and its allies have progressively increased and tightened sanctions. In particular, revelations in early April of atrocities committed by Russian troops in the town of Bucha prompted an intensification of economic measures amidst expressions of international outrage.Footnote 104 Just after the Bucha revelations on April 4, Biden called Putin a “war criminal” and promised that the United States would “continue to add sanctions.”Footnote 105 European Council President Charles Michel similarly tweeted that he was “[s]hocked by haunting images of atrocities committed by [the] Russian army in Kyiv liberated region” and noted that “[f]urther EU sanctions & support are on their way.”Footnote 106
On April 5, the Treasury Department announced that it had blocked Russia from making debt payments using dollars held in U.S. banks, reversing prior “special exemptions” that had “allow[ed] the Kremlin to tap accounts at U.S. banks to repay its debts,” despite U.S. sanctions.Footnote 107 The Biden administration made this decision as a “$552.4 million principal payment on a maturing bond” and “[a]n $84 million coupon payment” came due.Footnote 108 As a result, Russia paid its foreign creditors in rubles—a move that an industry body determined on April 20 “fell short of fulfilling [Russia's] debt obligations.”Footnote 109
On April 6, the United States, EU, and G7 announced that they would “continue to impose severe and immediate economic costs on the Putin regime for its atrocities in Ukraine, including in Bucha.”Footnote 110 The White House announced that the United States would impose “[f]ull blocking sanctions on Russia's largest financial institution, Sberbank, and Russia's largest private bank, Alfa Bank,”Footnote 111 both of which had been subject to lesser sanctions since February 24.Footnote 112 Biden also issued a new executive order, Executive Order 14,071, broadening the prior prohibition on new investments in particular sectors of the Russian economy,Footnote 113 to impose a blanket prohibition on “new investment in the Russian Federation by a United States person, wherever located.”Footnote 114 The order also prohibited the supply from the United States or by U.S. persons to anyone in Russia “of any category of services” determined by the Treasury Secretary, “in consultation with the Secretary of State.”Footnote 115 In addition, the White House announced “[f]ull blocking sanctions on Russian elites and their family members, including sanctions on: President Putin's adult children, Foreign Minister Lavrov's wife and daughter, and members of Russia's Security Council including former President and Prime Minister of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin.”Footnote 116 The following day, the Treasury and State Departments announced additional sanctions aimed at Russian state-owned enterprises, including “the world's largest diamond mining company,” and a company that “develops and constructs the majority of the Russian military's warships.”Footnote 117 On April 9, the Commerce Department further tightened export controls on Russia and Belarus, with Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo noting that the department is “using the authorities it has to respond to Putin's depravity.”Footnote 118
The United States has continued to broaden its sanctions,Footnote 119 including by sanctioning a variety of individuals and entities “involved in attempts to evade sanctions.”Footnote 120 On May 8, the Treasury Department announced “action to cut off access to services that are used by the Russian Federation and Russian elites to evade sanctions,” and used the authority provided by Executive Order 14,071 to prohibit the supply of “accounting, trust and corporate formation, and management consulting” services to Russia from the United States and U.S. persons.Footnote 121 Secretary of State Blinken has explained that “President Putin may have assumed that the United States and our allies were bluffing when we warned of massive, unprecedented consequences. But . . . [t]he United States doesn't bluff. And President Putin has gravely miscalculated.”Footnote 122
Putin called Western sanctions “akin to a declaration of war.”Footnote 123 In mid-March, he asserted that “the West's effort to organize an ‘economic blitzkrieg’ against Russia had failed,” but also acknowledged that sanctions had impacted Russia's economy.Footnote 124 Putin reserved particular ire for efforts to “freez[e] the assets of Russia's central bank held in North America and Europe,” calling the actions illegitimate and noting “‘[n]ow everyone knows that financial reserves can simply be stolen.’”Footnote 125 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov similarly admitted surprise at the central bank sanctions, calling them “thievery” and saying “no one could have predicted” such moves.Footnote 126
Russia has taken a number of measures to mitigate the effects of sanctions. Russia raised bank interest rates to 20 percent, set controls on non-ruble bank withdrawals, required companies to convert 80 percent of earned foreign currency into rubles, and allowed Russian borrowers to pay overseas debt only in rubles even if denominated in other currencies.Footnote 127 Russia has also used its energy exports as leverage to help bolster the currency, demanding “that 48 ‘unfriendly countries’ violate their own sanctions and pay for natural gas in rubles.”Footnote 128 European countries, such as Germany, Italy, and France have rejected this demand, saying it is a violation of their contracts with Russia.Footnote 129 On April 27, Russia's state-owned Gazprom cut off natural gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland because they refused to meet the payment requirement,Footnote 130 and it did the same to Finland on May 21.Footnote 131 However, other countries, including India, Turkey, South Korea, and China, have continued to purchase Russian oil, and “rising prices mean that Russia has earned 50 percent more in revenues [from oil exports] this year compared to the same period in 2021.”Footnote 132
In addition, Russia has threatened to nationalize the assets of foreign companies leaving the country, while “Russian prosecutors have issued warnings to Western companies in Russia, threatening to arrest corporate leaders there who criticize the government.”Footnote 133 By decree, the Kremlin also “effectively legalized patent theft from anyone affiliated with countries ‘unfriendly’ to it, declaring that unauthorized use will not be compensated,” and it has suggested it might do the same for trademarks, compromising the property interests of Western firms.Footnote 134 The White House warned Russia against such actions, with White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki tweeting that “‘[a]ny lawless decision by Russia to seize the assets of these companies will ultimately result in even more economic pain for Russia’ and may invite legal action.”Footnote 135
Russia has also issued retaliatory export controls and sanctions. Russia imposed an export ban covering two hundred products related to “telecoms, medical, vehicle, agricultural, and electrical equipment, as well as some forestry products such as timber” on “countries that have ‘committed unfriendly actions.’”Footnote 136 On March 15, the Russian government announced sanctions on current and former U.S. officials, including Biden, Blinken, Psaki, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, and former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.Footnote 137 The Russian Foreign Ministry described the sanctions, which are expected to bar travel to Russia and freeze any assets the sanctioned individuals hold there, as “the inevitable result of the ‘extremely Russophobic’ actions taken by the Biden administration.”Footnote 138 In response to questions about the sanctions, Psaki noted, “it won't surprise any of you that none of us are planning tourist trips to Russia and none of us have bank accounts that we won't be able to access, so we will forge ahead.”Footnote 139 On April 13, Russia announced sanctions on 398 of the 435 members of the U.S. House of Representatives to retaliate for sanctions against members of the Russian Duma.Footnote 140 Many of the sanctioned congressmen “took the sanctions in jest or wore them as a badge of pride.”Footnote 141
Questions remain about whether the sanctions and other economic measures will be effective, however efficacy may be defined.Footnote 142 Some concerns center on Russia's ability to evade sanctions. A senior U.S. Treasury Department official noted that “Russian elites and oligarchs are probably some of the best in the world at hiding their wealth,”Footnote 143 but the United States and the EU are both making efforts to prevent, discover, and punish sanctions evasion.Footnote 144 Other concerns stem from a lack of clarity about the goals sanctions seek to achieve. As one commentator put it, the countries imposing sanctions “need to have a theory of the case” and “whether the goal is to compel Russia into concessions or contain Russia's capabilities, some thought needs to be given about how the sanctions are supposed to work and the conditions under which they can be lifted,” with such terms “articulated to Russia and the rest of the world.”Footnote 145
Others have argued that sanctions should be carefully calibrated to avoid unintended consequences, such as incentivizing countries to establish alternative systems for financial flows or provoking Russia to engage in even more escalatory behavior.Footnote 146 Media reports have also mentioned debates within the Biden administration “about how far to push the sanctions without creating unintended consequences that would rattle the financial system and inflame inflation, which is soaring across much of the world.”Footnote 147 In congressional testimony in April, Treasury Secretary Yellen explained that the administration's “goal from the outset has been to impose maximum pain on Russia, while to the best of our ability shielding the United States and our partners from undue economic harm.”Footnote 148
Additional actions remain available if the United States and its allies choose to ratchet up economic pressure. One of the most far reaching moves would be the imposition of “secondary sanctions” that “would also punish third parties in other countries for interacting with parts of the Russian economy that have been sanctioned by the United States” making “‘Russia radioactive to non-U.S., non-European businesses as well.’”Footnote 149 To restrict Russian oil revenues, the United States is reportedly considering “imposing a price cap on Russian oil, backed by . . . secondary sanctions, which would punish foreign buyers that do not comply with U.S. restrictions by blocking them from doing business with American companies and those of partner nations.”Footnote 150 In addition, the United States has proposed expelling Russia from the G20. Secretary Yellen told Congress on April 6 that President Biden has “asked that Russia be removed from the G20, and I've made clear to my colleagues . . . that we will not be participating in a number of meetings if the Russians are there.”Footnote 151 The Biden administration is also seeking congressional authorization for an expedited procedure that would “streamline the process for seizure of oligarch assets, expand the assets subject to seizure, and enable the proceeds to flow to Ukraine.”Footnote 152 Taken together, all of the economic measures deployed against Russia suggest that the United States and European allies are “planning for a far different world, in which they no longer try to coexist and cooperate with Russia, but actively seek to isolate and weaken it as a matter of long-term strategy.”Footnote 153