Overview
Economic sanctions and export controls will form a core part of any multilateral response to an escalation of Russia’s military actions targeting Ukraine. While it is not possible to predict with certainty whether an escalation will occur or what form the responsive measures would take, this blog post outlines some of the current US sanctions proposals and authorizations to assist companies in taking preliminary steps to assess their potential exposure.
As of January 2022, none of the United States, the EU, or the UK have implemented any new, significant Russia-related sanctions or export control measures concerning Russia’s recent military buildup near the Russia-Ukraine border. Based on events in 2014 and the sanctions that ensued, companies could face rapid and potentially disruptive regulatory restrictions with wide-ranging impacts on a variety of industries. Some measures could be imposed within hours of a triggering event, or even prior to a specific triggering event. The US, EU, and UK are likely to coordinate a sanctions response to some extent, but some variations across different jurisdictions’ sanctions measures are also to be expected. According to reports, policymakers have yet to agree on the triggers for new sanctions, and diplomatic efforts are ongoing.
For more information on the ongoing policy developments, contact a member of Steptoe’s Economic Sanctions team.
Defending Ukraine Sovereignty Act of 2022
On January 12, 2022, Democratic Senator Robert Menendez introduced S.3488, the Defending Ukraine Sovereignty Act of 2022 (DUSA). If adopted into law, Title III of DUSA would mandate sanctions against Russian Federation officials, Russian financial institutions, Russian sovereign debt, companies in the Russian extractive sector, and the Nord Stream 2 pipeline in response to a Russian military escalation targeting Ukraine. The bill also targets “specialized financial messaging services” (e.g., SWIFT) provided to sanctioned Russian financial institutions.
While the draft bill could be changed during the legislative process, key provisions of Title III, as introduced, include:
- Section 302 requires the President to make a determination concerning whether “the Government of the Russian Federation, including through any of its proxies, is engaged in or knowingly supporting a significant escalation in hostilities or hostile action in or against Ukraine, compared to the level of hostilities or hostile action in or against Ukraine prior to December 1, 2021” and, if so, “whether such escalation has the aim or effect of undermining, overthrowing, or dismantling the Government of Ukraine, occupying the territory of Ukraine, or interfering with the sovereignty or territorial integrity of Ukraine.”
- Section 303 mandates sanctions against certain officials of the Russian Federation, including, among others, the President, Prime Minister, and Foreign Minister, and numerous military officials, within sixty days of an affirmative determination under Section 302, and requires the President to report periodically on other Russian officials warranting sanctions.
- Section 304 mandates sanctions against a minimum of three of Russia’s 12 largest financial institutions (which are named in the bill) within 30 days of an affirmative determination under Section 302. Section 304 also authorizes sanctions on the financial institutions’ subsidiaries and successor entities, and requires the President to report periodically on other significant Russian financial institutions warranting sanctions.
- Section 305 instructs the President to report to Congress on any “provider of specialized financial messaging services that continues to provide messaging services to, or enables or facilitates access to such services” for the 12 financial institutions named in Section 304, including intermediaries enabling such access, and “efforts to ensure the termination” of such services to any institution sanctioned under Section 304. Section 305 also authorizes the President to impose sanctions on any provider of financial specialized financial messaging services that continues to service a sanctioned financial institution after 90 days following the imposition of sanctions under Section 304.
- Section 306(a) instructs the President to prohibit US persons from all transactions involving Russian sovereign debt (beyond those previously imposed, as described below) within 30 days of an affirmative determination under Section 302. Section 306(b) requires the President to impose sanctions on non-US persons who are found to have engaged in transactions involving the debt of at least 10 Russian state-owned or -controlled entities that are not already sanctioned. Section 306(c) requires the President to report to Congress on non-US persons dealing in Russian sovereign debt and to impose sanctions on them, without regard to whether their dealings in Russian sovereign debt are significant.
- Section 307 requires the US State Department to review a May 19, 2021 waiver of secondary sanctions with respect to Nord Stream 2 AG and the chief executive officer of Nord Stream 2 AG. (For more information on the Nord Stream 2 sanctions, see this Steptoe blog post.)
- Section 308 requires the President to impose sanctions on “any entity established for or responsible for the planning, construction, or operation of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline or a successor entity” and their corporate officers, within 30 days of an affirmative determination under Section 302.
- Section 309 requires the President to identify within 60 days and sanction within 90 days of an affirmative determination under Section 302 foreign persons in Russia’s oil and gas, coal, and minerals extraction, mining, and processing industries and “any other sector or industry with respect to which the President determines the imposition of sanctions is in the United States national security interest.”
- Section 310 outlines the sanctions applicable to parties identified in Sections 303, 304, 306(b), 306(c), 308, and 309. The sanctions include blocking sanctions (asset freezes) on property and interests in property of designated persons and visa bans. Section 203 of the bill requires the present to evaluate whether to impose the sanctions described in section 310 if Russia engages in a cyber attack that materially disrupts or degrades any critical infrastructure in Ukraine.
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