US Congressional Bill Takes Anti-Russian Sanctions to ‘Higher Level’

© Sputnik / Igor Mikhalev / Go to the mediabankThe new Russian sanctions bill passed by Congress takes the restrictive measures to a whole new level: legal expert
The new Russian sanctions bill passed by Congress takes the restrictive measures to a whole new level: legal expert - Sputnik International
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A legal expert is claiming that the new Russian sanctions bill that the US Congress has passed takes the restrictive measures to a whole new level.

WASHINGTON, December 16 (Sputnik) – The new Russian sanctions bill passed by Congress takes the restrictive measures to a whole new level, as it could for the first time include secondary sanctions that would target non-US persons and entities, a legal expert has told Sputnik.

"This bill takes the sanctions that are possibly imposable against Russia to a different, higher level, because now foreign persons and foreign financial institutions with no nexus to the US can be sanctioned for certain activities – limited or proscribed – in Russia," Louis Rothberg, a legal counsel at the Morgan Lewis law firm, who has handled export control issues for US government agencies, said Monday.

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Under Section 4 of the bill, which still needs to be signed by US President Barack Obama, the president would be authorized to impose sanctions on foreign entities dealing in prohibited or restricted activities in Russia.

"If you are an Asian company and you want to step into the shoes of what a US company used to be doing in a Russian crude oil project, and the US company cannot be doing that now because of sanctions…the [US] president can zap you with a menu of possible sanctions," Rothberg explained.

Similar to US sanctions against Iran, Section 5 of the sanctions bill would target foreign financial institutions investing in proscribed activities in Russia, including funding of non-US entities engaged in prohibited activities in Russia. The sanctions could cut off a foreign bank from doing business in the US and international financial markets, Rothberg said.

"If you are legitimate foreign bank and you get restricted on how you can access the US banking system your ability to work as a true international bank is really adversely affected," Rothberg said, stressing that the restrictions "could induce foreign banks to think very hard about certain transactions with foreign persons where those foreign persons are undertaking certain activities in Russia that are sanctionable".

The US Senate and House passed the bill, titled the "Ukraine Freedom Support Act" last week. If Obama authorizes the bill, it would add on to the sanctions already imposed by the United States, the European Union and their allies against Russia over its alleged involvement in the Ukrainian crisis.

Russia has repeatedly stressed that sanctions, which are not justified, since Russia has never interfered in Ukraine's internal affairs, are counterproductive and threaten international stability, harming not only the target country, but also those using the restrictive measures.

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