Showing posts with label sanctions on Russia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sanctions on Russia. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Russians Use Central Asian Tech Suppliers To Evade Sanctions


The U.S.and its Western allies need to put an end to this:

On the shipping label, the Chinese drones were billed as heavy-duty cropdusters, the kind used by orchards and big farms. But the identity of the buyer — a Russian company that purchased a truckload of the aircraft in early May at nearly $14,000 each — hinted at other possible uses.

The drones’ potential military value, ironically, had been noted by Russia’s government, which last year seized four aircraft of the same model in eastern Ukraine and claimed that Kyiv was planning to use them for chemical warfare. The sturdy all-weather quadcopters are built to carry payloads of nearly 70 pounds and are designed to glide at treetop level trailing a fog of liquid chemicals.

Whatever their intended use, the drones were on the final leg of a trek across Central Asia when they were intercepted by customs officers near the border between Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. To U.S. officials recounting the events weeks later, the episode was unusual: More often than not, they said, such goods pass into Russia uninterrupted.

The seizure of the drones was hailed as a rare victory in a whack-a-mole effort to halt the flow of banned hardware and electronics pouring into Russia in support of its war effort in Ukraine. Blocked from procuring military goods from Western countries, Moscow has increasingly looked for help from the former Soviet states of Central Asia, some of which are historically and financially bound to Russia but also trade extensively with Europe and China.

Biden administration officials say they are particularly concerned about the role played by Kyrgyzstan, the country from which the drone shipment originated. The mountainous, landlocked country of 6.7 million people was once the southern frontier of the Soviet empire, and it is now home to numerous businesses that have become a conduit for Western and Asian goods that Russia can’t legally obtain elsewhere, officials said in interviews.

And we are:

After months of fruitless visits to the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek by a stream of U.S. and European diplomats, the Biden administration is preparing new economic measures to pressure the country to halt the trade, according to two U.S. officials familiar with the plans. The actions, which in the past have included sanctions or a “blacklisting” of companies accused of violations, could come as early as this week, said the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss diplomatically sensitive deliberations.

“Kyrgyzstan, while small relative to other countries, is a clear example of every factor at play at once to create an unacceptably [sanctions] evasion-friendly environment,” the senior official said...

Former USSR republics bordering on Russia are in a difficult position, lacking the political and economic will to confront their aggressive neighbor.  Russia considers them essentially vassal states, perhaps someday to be reconstituted into a Greater Russia just as Putin wanted to happen with Ukraine. But some are doing a better job of enforcing sanctions than Kyrgyzstan, and maximum pressure needs to be applied at this crucial phase of Putin's criminal war in Ukraine.  Allowing him to resupply deadly military equipment and components through a black market bazaar in Kyrgyzstan is unacceptable.


Monday, April 18, 2022

Shutting Down The Russian Genocide Machine



If anyone tries to tell you Western sanctions aren't effective, direct them here:

A Russian facility responsible for the production of surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) has been shut down due to import restrictions and Western sanctions in the latest military production item to suffer amid Russia's ongoing invasion of Ukraine, the Ukrainian Intelligence Directorate (GUR) claimed Sunday.

The facility specifically being affected is the Ulyanovsk Mechanical Plant (JSC UMZ), a Russian military production factory located in the Ulyanovsk Oblast that was opened by the Soviet Union in the 1960s.

The facility is used to produce a number of different SAM models, such as the 9K37 Buk, designated by NATO as SA-11 Gadfly, and the 2K22 Tunguska, designated by NATO as SA-19 Grison.

... and here:

Sanctions imposed on Russia to cripple its economy may be starting to hurt its military capabilities. 

The country’s primary armored vehicle manufacturer appears to have run out of parts to make and repair tanks, according to a Facebook post by the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

Citing “available information,” it reported state-owned company Uralvagonzavod, which builds tanks such as the T-72B3, has had to temporarily cease production in Nizhny Tagil.

#Russia's only tank manufacturer, Uralvagonzavod, has stopped its production. The main reason for this is a lack of component parts. 

The failure to take into account Russia's reliance on Western technologies/ materiel in their arms industry was yet another catastrophic miscalculation by "genius" war criminal Putin, who apparently was under the delusion that a war with Ukraine would be over before sanctions could cripple his genocide machine. Sad!

(Photo: Russian tank destroyed near Kyiv;  gee, hope nobody was hurt/ AP)


Monday, February 28, 2022

Monday Reading

 

As always, please go to the links for the full articles/op eds.

The value of the Russian ruble has crashed, as Western sanctions have started to bite:

Russia was scrambling to prevent financial meltdown Monday as its economy was slammed by a broadside of crushing Western sanctions imposed over the weekend in response to the invasion of Ukraine.
President Vladimir Putin was due to hold crisis talks with his top advisers after the ruble crashed to a record low against the US dollar, the Russian central bank more than doubled interest rates to 20%, and the Moscow stock exchange was shuttered for the day.
The European subsidiary of Russia's biggest bank was on the brink of collapse as savers rushed to withdraw their deposits. Economists warned that the Russian economy could shrink by 5%.
The ruble lost about 20% of its value to trade at 100 to the dollar at 6 a.m. ET after earlier plummeting as much as 40%. The start of trading on the Russian stock market was delayed, and then canceled entirely, according to a statement from the country's central bank.
The latest barrage of sanctions came Saturday, when the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom and Canada said they would expel some Russian banks from SWIFT, a global financial messaging service, and "paralyze" the assets of Russia's central bank.
"The ratcheting up of Western sanctions over the weekend has left Russian banks on the edge of crisis," wrote Liam Peach, an emerging market economist at Capital Economics, in a note on Monday.

The Russian stock market closed today following the ruble's crash.  The sight of Russians waiting in line at banks to close accounts and carting their rubles away in wheelbarrows won't make thug Putin any more popular in a nation whose anti- war sentiment is spreading from the streets to the oligarchs' dachas.  Tell us again how sanctions don't work.

Following BP's lead, Norwegian oil giant Equinor ASA is divesting its Russian oil and gas investments:

Norwegian oil giant Equinor ASA says it has decided to stop new investments into Russia and divest from its joint ventures in Russia after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

The Norway-based energy group has been in Russia for over 30 years and made a cooperation agreement with state-controlled Russian oil and gas company Rosneft in 2012.

CEO Anders Opedal said the company was “deeply troubled by the invasion of Ukraine, which represents a terrible setback for the world, and we are thinking of all those who are suffering because of the military action.”

He added that “we regard our position as untenable” and added that the company was exiting “in a manner that is consistent with our values.”

On the battlefront in Ukraine, events are taking a decidedly negative turn for Russian thug Putin:

OBOZREVATEL is reporting that 5,000 contract servicemen -not conscripts, professional soldiers- rioted in the Belgorod region of Russia, which is right across the border from the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv.

About 5,000 contract soldiers, who were hastily collected to be sent to Ukraine, refused to go to fight for Putin on the territory of our state.

Formally, the rebellious contractors argue their refusal to participate in hostilities in Ukraine by the fact that this is not provided for in their contracts.

The incompetence of the Russian invasion is startling to Western observers.  They're demonstrating logistical and tactical malfeasance unworthy of a military of Russia's relative sophistication.

It's also reported that troops from Putin puppet Alexander Lukashenko's Belarus and Putin's Chechen fiefdom are engaging in battle, with at least one Chechen motorized regiment (56 tanks) destroyed and this fascist leader killed:


 

More updates at the link above, and an excellent summary of the situation in Ukraine and Moscow at Infidel 753's blog.

Leonard Pitts, Jr., reminds us how we got here, and where it might lead us:

Like Putin, much of the right bears allegiance not to truth, much less to democracy, but rather, to the brutish power of the strongman to do as he pleases, unfettered by such niceties. That’s what they very nearly imposed in 2016. It is what they promise in 2024. And if you’re not frightened, you’re not paying attention. 

This moment has been a long time coming. A little more than a quarter century ago, a House speaker named Newt Gingrich declared politics war and an upstart cable network called Fox declared facts optional. It was called a conservative resurgence, but it was actually the foundation stone for the kingdom of lies our country has become.

No wonder Trump likes Putin and claims the feeling is mutual. Each recognizes himself in the other. 

What they recognize, what they have in common, is that transactional disdain for the truth and, more to the point, for anyone naive enough to expect it. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton presented her Russian counterpart a red “reset” button, Russia accepted it, but kept right on being a thugocracy. TV pundits kept assuring us Trump was going to “become presidential” any second now, but to his last day, he remained a willful child. Now families seek refuge in Ukrainian subways, while Trump cheers their tormentor on. 

Let no one be surprised. 

What begins in lies tends to end in carnage.

Last but not least, it's highly recommended that you make a visit to Infidel 753's link round-up to posts of interest from around the Internet.  As noted above, he also has an excellent round-up of the military and political situation in the Russia/Ukraine war.