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US Sanctions Spree Continues With 15 More For Russian Entities (theregister.com) 129

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register: It's sanctions central at the US Treasury this week as a further 15 are slapped on organizations and individuals in Russia. The Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) designated 13 organizations and two individuals -- all concerning financial services organizations, including cryptocurrency exchanges that offered services to already-sanctioned dark web marketplaces in Russia, and those who helped run them. Five of the 13 freshly designated entities were also controlled by individuals who were already sanctioned. The latest round of trade restrictions were placed on those who are believed to have helped evade existing US sanctions.

"Many of the individuals and entities designated today facilitated transactions or offered other services that helped OFAC-designated entities evade sanctions," an OFAC statement read. "These designations build upon OFAC's February 23, 2024 action to target companies servicing Russia's core financial infrastructure and curtail Russia's use of the international financial system to further its war against Ukraine." They follow the initial seven sanctions announced on Monday, all relating to Chinese nationals and members of Beijing's APT31 offensive cyber outfit.

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US Sanctions Spree Continues With 15 More For Russian Entities

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  • by Hadlock ( 143607 ) on Tuesday March 26, 2024 @06:11PM (#64347079) Homepage Journal

    Why not sanction 500, or even 1000 at a time? 15,000? Let's cast a wide net, and then redact as necessary. This is one of those rare cases where "shoot first, ask questions later" is probably a valid solution.

    • Every time I hear about more sanctions I'm puzzled that they didn't go scorched earth when the war first started.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        That should be clue 1 that this stuff doesn't work. If it did, it would be employed punitively to accomplish goals. Instead, it's used to generate press releases.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Because the US at least nominally follows the rules of law and doesn't collectively punish innocent people.

  • I don't recall any time in history where US sanctions have changed the behavior of an enemy, ever.
    • by HBI ( 10338492 )

      They 'contributed' to bringing people to the table in the past, but they were employed properly at that time. Against small nations and/or against the Communist bloc that was demonstrably economically weaker than the US-led West. This is no longer how things are done, and no longer the case.

      • Re:Sanctions (Score:5, Informative)

        by Can'tNot ( 5553824 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2024 @01:16AM (#64347793)
        The current sanctions against Russia are clearly showing an effect. They haven't ended the war, but Russia is running out of money, their currency is falling and they no longer have the ability to prop it up. India has refused to continue buying oil in rubles, and they are Russia's largest remaining customer.

        The sanctions are significant, their effect is just indirect.
        • by HBI ( 10338492 )

          Note: German source. Russian GDP growing. [dw.com]
          Gold in rubles - 5y [ycharts.com]
          Gold in USD - extend to 5y [businessinsider.com]

          I have no idea why otherwise smart people keep believing things that are demonstrably not true.

          • by Anonymous Coward
            Did you even read your link?

            "What's happening right now is that Russia is actually, in a way, almost ironically becoming more like the Soviet Union in that it has high spending on the military and in some cases heavy industry, and at the same time the level of consumption is falling for the population.

            So all the money is wasted on the military and all the people are worse off. (the ones still alive)
            It's very easy to spend money to make GDP. Just look at China for example. At least China gets some high speed rail and some fancy infrastructure. Russia just gets some missiles to shoot off and some vehicles to get blown up. (not tanks or planes as they can't really make them any more).

            According to your chart Rubles are worth 30% less gold than a year ago. Only 9% for US dollars.

          • In addition to what the other guy said, the real point is that Russia has switched to a war economy. Remember that GPD is a measure of production, so this boosts GDP as they start producing tons of weapons and ammunition, but it kills them in the long term.

            Your currency charts reflect how much the ruble has fallen compared to the dollar, though I think it's a little hard to read this way. You can see that the price of gold has gone up 65% over the last five years in dollars, and 135% in rubles. So the va
    • /shrug.

      Fuck around and find out. The noose will only get tighter

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        Yeah, because that's worked **SO** well in Cuba.

    • Re:Sanctions (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday March 26, 2024 @06:32PM (#64347151)

      I wouldn't discount them just yet. Does Russia still sell the products we sanction? Yes. Sure they do. We don't control the behaviour of other countries. But it means that they have to sell at heavily discounted prices because they need that money and can't really find any takers for their very one-dimensional exports.

      One can argue that China is profiting heavily from this, since they got Russia by the balls and they sure know it.

    • Wasn't the blockading of the South a major factor in their economic downfall ?

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        Blockade != Sanction

        We can't blockade Russia, it's an act of war.

        • by HBI ( 10338492 )

          Also, they have interior lines. That's the problem - Mahan's theories don't work well against a continental power like Russia. They are like rock to scissors.

    • Sanctions don't do anything but we should do them anyway for moral reasons.

  • Russia sucks (Score:5, Insightful)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday March 26, 2024 @06:31PM (#64347139)

    1. In spite of them torturing terrorists, they are still the number 1 most terrorist attacked indiustrial nation. The Moscow subway (the same one Tucker Carlson said was way better than anything in America), for example, has been bombed 3 times in the last 20 years. Republicans are saying "we should torture, like the Russians do" .. yet it's only made them more of a target. Torture is never OK, independent of it being beneficial or not .. but Russia shows that being a torturer doesn't pay.
    2. Going by the homicdes numbers on Russia's own federal website: In terms of chance of being murdered, Russia is the deadliest white-ruled country for white people. The US OVERALL homicde rate last year was 6.4, Russia's rate according to their own statistics was 6.9. For whites, the US rate matches any European country.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Train0987 ( 1059246 )

      Every country on the planet tortures terrorists. The CIA's worst black sites used to be in Ukraine and Poland ironically enough.

      • by HBI ( 10338492 )

        Why do facts get modded down? The US spent a decade trying to argue that torture is legitimate and practiced it in many places. I'm not sure we are done with it, etiher.

    • Not a Russia fan by any means, but there subway IS better than anything in the US.
      • Moscow metro has been bombed multiple times, not including shove (happened last year to a teenager) and machine gun incidents and to "top" that of course a beheading (no pun intended).

        That's "better than anything in the US" how?

        • Chandeliers. No US subway has chandeliers. You might die in a terror attack in the Moscow subway, but at least you can look at the chandeliers.
  • by PuddleBoy ( 544111 ) on Tuesday March 26, 2024 @07:42PM (#64347353)

    The war in Ukraine is now over 2 years old. Any Russian companies, oligarchs, whatever have now known for 2 years that they are likely targets of sanctions.

    Why would they leave themselves vulnerable? Move assets to shell companies, distant family members, what ever.

    I think the sanctions stick is yielding diminishing returns..

    • by HBI ( 10338492 )

      Assuredly, but sanctions were pointless in this case. Psychological at best. Pissing off near-peer nations who can forge trade ties that are de-dollarized in response to dollar-based sanctions is a foolish move that ruins the efficacy of sanctions in the future against smaller countries.

      Analogy: utilizing inadequate doses of an antibiotic against a pathogen. They develop resistance quickly. Same here. Then they can pass the resistance to other bacteria, to the point that your antibiotic becomes ineffec

  • Why in the world does the US president believe that sanctions work? Like they can't bank in China or Singapore also? Sanctions DO NOT WORK!
  • Not tech and anyone who follows the Ukraine war has better sources by far than this place, for example Telegram channels etc where there are fewer useless middlemen.

  • Are we allowed to go back to making fun of absurd and ineffectual sanctions now? (as the story lead is clearly doing, even if just a little)

  • All Russian business groups with interests that exceed the shortsighted vision of Putin should consolidate forces and kill him. Putin destroyed the FDI market irreparably, and the Kremlin failed to create a market where your value is fairly assessed. Improve every profit by killing Putin and destroying the dominance of the Kremlin.
  • At this point it's just obvious there are moles at Treasury who are working to promote the replacement of USD with the BRICS+ currency.

    USD is fully weaponized and counties that don't want to snap to orders from whatever US administration are going elsewhere.

    The dummies figured SWIFT would be too hard to replace.

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