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when will that stupid blonde wake up?The European Union’s newest round of sanctions on Russia will target the country’s gold exports and tighten up existing loopholes, news site Euractiv reported on Thursday. Further sanctions on energy are apparently off the table, as Europe grapples with the consequences of its earlier sanctions packages. Russian gold imports have already been banned by the US, UK, Japan and Canada, in a move agreed during the G7 summit in Germany last month. While Russia’s gold exports were estimated to be worth around $15 billion in 2021, the ban was described by industry analysts as mostly symbolic, as Western sanctions have already closed off European and US markets to Russia’s bullion. Citing EU diplomats, Euractiv said that the EU’s seventh sanctions package will also blacklist more Russian entities and individuals reportedly linked to the Kremlin, and will add certain goods to existing lists in a bid to crack down on sanctions evasion. The package, which is expected to be announced within a week, may also include a reference to the European Commission’s recently published guidance on which goods can and cannot be transported from Russia to its European exclave of Kaliningrad across Lithuanian territory. Notably absent from the package are further measures targeting Russia’s energy sector. The sixth sanctions package included bans on Russian coal and oil imports, but excluded Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, which receive oil from Russia via pipeline. While the Ukrainian government and its closest allies in Eastern Europe have demanded that the bloc shut itself off from Russian gas, many countries in the EU – including Germany and Hungary – are highly dependent on this fuel, and are already facing economic devastation and the prospect of rationing as a result of earlier sanctions impeding supply. “What is definitely problematic is to include energy into the sanctions, because a rule must be observed that the sanctions must have a greater impact on Russia than on the countries imposing the sanctions,”Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala told Reuters on Wednesday. The value of the euro has plunged to a 20-year low since the EU imposed its unprecedented economic sanctions on Russia, with the currency reaching parity against the US dollar on Monday. Meanwhile, Russia’s ruble is stronger than it was before the start of the military operation in Ukraine, and soaring energy profits have boosted Moscow’s current account surplus to a record 70.1 billion, Bloomberg reported this week.
READ MORE: https://www.rt.com/business/559008-eu-new-sanctions-package/
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nothing coming out of the G7…….
BY Salman Rafi Sheikh
When Russia was arbitrarily excluded from the ‘Group of eight’ (G8) in 2014, many in the West saw this as a step toward a more cohesive western bloc – the so-called G7 – that could collectively – and effectively – counter Russia through a homogenous response combining economic and military means. The response the West gave to Russia’s military operation has not been unexpected, but there is little denying that – especially, with the war continuing and the West coming under a lot of economic pressure – the response has become internally defeatist. This was clearly manifested through the most recent G7 summit held in Germany, where ‘powerful’ western leaders met against the backdrop of the striking failure of the overall package of their anti-Russia policy – sanctions, supply of weapons to Ukraine, and vows to extend ‘unlimited’ support to Ukraine, etc. The Russian military continues to consolidate its gains, with the Russian currency, too, gaining against the USD. The fact the Russian currency is much stronger than western hopes and projections point to the failure of the western plan to destroy the Russian economy through financial sanctions.
In other words, the very source of the West’s many troubles is Russia’s ability to continue selling oil and gas around the world at a much higher price than last year. According to the data provided by Russia’s Central Bank, Russia’s surplus from January to May 2022 was just over US$110 billion. This is 3.5 per cent more than what Russia had last year. This progress – which defies the war itself – has allowed Russia to withstand western sanctions, as well as directly contributing to the inability of the West to chart a new, internally coherent response.
A report in the Wall Street Journal thus noted the West’s growing incapacity vis-à-vis Russia as well as signs of internal disunity:
“Now high inflation, slowing growth, and the specter of energy shortages in Europe this winter are damping the West’s appetite for tougher sanctions against Moscow. Divergences among the leaders of the U.S., Canada, Britain, France, Italy, Germany and Japan prevented them from agreeing on concrete new sanctions.”
Some key western leaders – especially, France’s Macron – have already developed views to settle the war through dialogue with Russia. Macron’s views, as could be expected, have not been received well by the UK’s Boris Johnson, who told Macron that settling the war now would cause “enduring instability.” But, unlike Johnson, Macron perhaps sees the limits of western options.
Macron was quick to tell Biden that even if the UAE and Saudi Arabia were to increase production, this would not help. What it means is that the global energy prices, primarily soared by western sanctions, cannot be brought down in ways the West deemed it could.
The West’s growing troubles – and indeed weakness – is also evident from the fact that the presence of non-member countries, such as India, did not add to the bloc’s efforts to cobble together a global alliance against Russia. India is an interesting example. When the Russia-Ukraine war started and India decided to buy Russian oil, the US warned New Delhi, in April, that there will be “consequences” over attempts to “circumvent” sanctions against Russia.
Now that India was invited to the summit means that the West has failed to defeat Russia on its own and that it is desperately looking to other states. But did this strategy work? The West obviously wanted to give India temporary prestige as a global power to wean it away from Russia. But it did not work. As reports indicate, India’s Modi told the German leader, Olaf Scholz, that India would not become part of any anti-Russia configuration and/or impose any sanctions to become part of the war.
The core reasons for this rejection are simple. India, as its foreign minister recently said, does not consider Europe’s/West’s problems as its own problems. To quote him, “Europe has to grow out of the mindset that Europe’s problems are the world’s problems, but the world’s problems are not Europe’s problems.” What really makes such a congruence difficult is the fact that India’s purchase of energy from Russia remains meagre compared to Europe’s. As the most recent data shows, in the first 100 days of Russia’s military operation in Ukraine, about three-quarters of Russia’s revenues from oil and gas came from Europe. Only 5 per cent came from India. How can then Europe convince nations like India to cut off Russia?
That no further sanctions have been imposed on Russia shows that the West cannot simply control the whole world and/or really ‘isolate’ Russia in any meaningful way, especially when the war has grown out of the US push to expand NATO to encircle Russia.
No wonder Biden remained reticent at the summit, even as he made a hurried departure out of the summit without making any speech. There was little for him to say in the wake of nothing concrete coming out of the summit that was thought to be the most productive one held in recent years. It comes as a grim reminder to the bloc that in a world characterized by growing multipolarity, the so-called ‘free democracies’ cannot arrogate to themselves the task of ‘guiding’ the world.
Salman Rafi Sheikh, research-analyst of International Relations and Pakistan’s foreign and domestic affairs, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”
READ MORE:
https://journal-neo.org/2022/07/13/a-stronger-russia-humiliates-the-west/
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EU cannot afford sanctions fatigue……..
The embargoes imposed by the European Union against Moscow are intended not to stop the fighting in Ukraine, but wreck the Russian economy, the bloc’s foreign policy commissioner Josep Borrell said in Brussels on Monday. Borrell also announced an EU ban on Russian gold exports later this week.
“The EU sanctions will not stop the military activities in Ukraine, but ought to create a lot of problems for the Russian economy,” Borrell said, adding that the EU “cannot afford sanctions fatigue.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin “counts on the fatigue of democracies with sanctions,” the EU high representative for foreign policy said. “It is not easy but we must continue to put pressure on the Russian economy. Our European societies must not abandon this policy,” he added.
Borrell’s comments echoed the argument he made in a blog post over the weekend, responding in part to Hungarian PM Viktor Orban’s statement that the embargo policy has been “miscalculated” and harmed the EU members more so than Moscow.
The Spanish diplomat also argued the embargoes were not to blame for the pain at the pump, saying the price of oil was the same now as it had been in February.
Borrell revealed that the EU is planning to impose a ban on Russian gold later this week, in a mini-package of measures intended to improve the implementation of existing sanctions. The ban would affect the “the direct or indirect import, purchase or transfer of gold, which constitutes Russia’s most significant export after energy,”according to the wording leaked to the Guardian.
While Brussels is officially committed to supporting the Ukrainian government with a €9 billion ($9 billion) emergency loan, the Wall Street Journal reported no money had been paid out yet. Meanwhile, the fund to supply Kiev with weapons has been capped at €5.7 billion until 2027.
READ MORE:
https://www.rt.com/russia/559195-borrell-purpose-sanctions-economy/
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HOPEFULLY, THE INTERVENTION WILL BE FINISHED BY NEXT WEEK..............
sanction-ish…..
The EU has blocked a proposal to impose sanctions on Russian titanium producer VSMPO-AVISMA, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on Thursday.
According to the report, the decision was made after France and other EU members raised concerns over a potential Russian retaliatory ban on titanium exports.
VSMPO-AVISMA is the world’s largest manufacturer of titanium and titanium alloy products, which are widely used in aircraft production, from the airframe and engine parts to landing gear. The Russian metals company is a critical supplier of titanium to EU-based Airbus, the biggest commercial jet maker in the world, and the loss of deliveries from Russia would be a major blow.
Last month, the airplane maker publicly called for the EU to refrain from imposing sanctions on Russian imports of the metal. According to consulting firm AlixPartners, roughly 65% of Airbus’ titanium comes from Russia.
VSMPO-AVISMA is partly owned by Russian space and aviation corporation Rostec (25% plus 1 share), and it supplies products to more than 450 companies in 50 countries, including Boeing, Airbus, Embraer, and Rolls-Royce.
Earlier this year, Rolls-Royce announced that it would temporarily stop purchasing Russian titanium in connection with the conflict in Ukraine and Western sanctions on Moscow. However, media later reported that Rolls-Royce did not terminate the current contract, and deliveries could resume at any time, citing sources within the company. Later, US plane maker Boeing also announced it would suspend purchases of titanium from VSMPO-AVISMA, saying it intends to reorient “to other markets and directions.”
READ MORE:
https://www.rt.com/business/559434-eu-blocks-sanctions-russian-titanium/
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