Yellen says US will address potential gaps in Russia sanctions
CHICAGO: The United States will address potential gaps in
tough sanctions imposed on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine, US Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen said on Wednesday (Mar 2), adding the measures would
"continue to bite".
Yellen said financial sanctions on the Russian central bank,
commercial banks and members of the country's wealthy elite were having a
significant impact, as demonstrated by the rouble's sharp fall.
"Russia is increasingly an economic island," she
said at the University of Illinois-Chicago after visiting Chicago's Ukrainian
Village neighborhood.
"We will continue to look at how the sanctions work and
whether there are leakages and we have the possibility to address them."
Asked whether sanctions to curb Russia's oil and gas exports
could follow, she said "nothing is off the table", but added that the
United States had not taken this step to spare Americans, Europeans and other
people around the world from "punishing consequences".
Sanctions imposed last Sunday and Monday have so far
restricted 80 percent of the Russian banking sector's assets and
"immobilised" about half of the Russian central bank's assets, she
said.
The rouble, which has lost about a third of its value since
the start of the year, touched a fresh record low of 110 to the dollar in
Moscow on Wednesday as the country's financial system teetered under the weight
of Western sanctions.
Russia calls its actions in Ukraine a "special
operation" that is not designed to occupy territory but to destroy its
neighbour's military capabilities.
The former chair of the US Federal Reserve said she knew
there were concerns about members of Russia's elite using cryptocurrencies as a
possible means to evade sanctions, but noted there were anti-money laundering
laws in place to prevent that from happening.
"That is a channel to be watched," she said.
"But ... many participants in the cryptocurrency networks are subject to
anti-money-laundering (laws) and sanctions. So it's not that that sector is
completely one where things can be evaded."
Yellen said she does not expect the sanctions on Russia to
have a major impact on the economic trajectory of the United States, due to
limited US trade and financial connections with Russia. Their effects will most
likely be transmitted through higher energy prices, she said, adding that Biden
was seeking to keep the United States well-supplied with oil.
The Treasury will continue to "go after oligarchs or Russian elites who are key to President Putin's corrupt power", she said.
"We have sanctioned many of these individuals over the
last few weeks and we are assembling a task force with Justice Department
colleagues and our allies to uncover, freeze, and seize their wealth around the
world."
Washington is preparing a sanctions package targeting more
Russian oligarchs as well as their companies and assets, two sources familiar
with the matter said on Wednesday.
Yellen, also said stronger economic policies were needed to
strengthen America at home, despite an economic recovery from COVID-19 that has
exceeded most expectations and US growth that looks poised to continue.
At the University of Chicago's Innovation Center, she called
for Congress to pass key Biden economic investment proposals, including funding
for research, child care, universal pre-school and clean energy.
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