Advertisement

Biden levies new sanctions against Russian energy sector. Will Trump undo them?

People carry an injured woman as a fire burns in the background.
People carry an injured woman to an ambulance after a Russian airstrike in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine.
(Zaporizhzhia regional military administration / AP)

President Biden’s administration announced Friday that it’s expanding sanctions against Russia’s critically important energy sector, unveiling a new effort to pressure Moscow over its nearly three-year-old war in Ukraine as President-elect Donald Trump gets set to return to office vowing to quickly end the conflict.

The outgoing Democratic administration billed the new sanctions as the most significant to date against Russia’s oil and liquefied natural gas sectors, the driver of the Russian economy. Officials said the sanctions, which punish entities that do business with the Russians, have the potential to cost the Russian economy billions of dollars more per month.

Also targeted by the new sanctions are more than 180 oil-carrying vessels that are suspected of being part of a shadow fleet used by the Kremlin to evade oil sanctions as well as traders, oil field service firms and Russian energy officials. Several of the vessels targeted are also suspected of shipping sanctioned Iranian oil, according to the U.S. Treasury Department.

Advertisement

“The United States is taking sweeping action against Russia’s key source of revenue for funding its brutal and illegal war against Ukraine,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement. “With today’s actions, we are ratcheting up the sanctions risk associated with Russia’s oil trade, including shipping and financial facilitation in support of Russia’s oil exports.”

President-elect Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin share some traits and want some of the same things. But a chasm divides them.

In a move coordinated with Washington, the U.K. also imposed sanctions on Russian energy firms. The U.S. and Britain are targeting two of Russia’s major oil producers, Gazprom Neft and Surgutneftegas, and dozens of the companies’ subsidiaries.

The Foreign Office said that the two companies combined produce more than 1 million barrels of oil a day, worth $23 billion a year. British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said that “oil revenues are the lifeblood of [President Vladimir] Putin’s war economy.”

Advertisement

“Taking on Russian oil companies will drain Russia’s war chest — and every ruble we take from Putin’s hands helps save Ukrainian lives,” he said.

The U.K. has already sanctioned almost 100 vessels in Russia’s oil-transporting “shadow fleet” as Ukraine’s Western allies seek to increase economic pressure on Moscow ahead of any negotiations on ending the war.

White House national security spokesman John F. Kirby said the Biden administration chose this moment — 10 days before Biden leaves office — for tougher oil measures because worries about world oil markets have subsided.

Advertisement

“This was really based on market conditions,” Kirby said. “And so the time was propitious for this decision, and that’s why the president made it.”

The State Department also announced it was hitting 14 senior Rosatom officials and executives with travel bans that also affect their immediate family members.

Biden administration officials said that it will ultimately be up to the Trump administration whether to keep or scrap the new sanctions.

Trump’s transition team did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the sanctions.

Asked whether the Biden administration consulted with the incoming Trump team, Kirby responded, “We have at every step and on every major issue been keeping the transition team informed of our decisions, what we’re doing and why we’re doing it.”

Trump’s incoming national security advisor, Mike Waltz, wrote in an opinion piece for the Economist published shortly before election day that the U.S. should “use economic leverage” for “cracking down on Russia’s illicit oil sales” to bring Putin to the negotiating table.

Advertisement

Meanwhile, Trump told reporters Thursday that Putin “wants to meet, and we are setting it up.”

The judge, as expected, imposes no penalty. The outcome in Trump’s felony case cements his conviction but frees him to return to the White House unencumbered by the threat of jail or a fine.

Trump’s warm relationship with Putin over the years has come under heavy criticism. The Republican president-elect has also balked at the cost of U.S. aid to Ukraine, pledging to move quickly to end the conflict upon his return to office Jan. 20.

Trump added a new layer of doubt about future American support earlier this week when he appeared to sympathize with Putin’s position that Ukraine should not be part of NATO. The president-elect has criticized the Biden administration for expressing support for Kyiv’s eventual membership in the transatlantic military alliance.

Biden spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday as the sanctions were announced, discussing his administration’s ongoing support for the effort to hold Russia at bay and underscored the need for that support to continue. The White House said Zelensky expressed appreciation for U.S. support.

White House national security advisor Jake Sullivan on Friday warned that a pullback in support for Ukraine would have reverberations far beyond Kyiv. He noted that the U.S. has relied on European allies’ cooperation over the last four years as it devised a strategy to deal with growing economic competition posed by China.

“I think it’s evident that if the U.S. pulls the rug out from under Ukraine, that will have an impact on the health of our European alliances and it will have reverberations in the Indo-Pacific,” Sullivan said in a conversation with a small group of reporters at the White House.

Advertisement

The Kremlin on Friday dismissed the new sanctions ahead of the anticipated announcement. “We are aware that the administration will try to leave as difficult legacy in bilateral relations as possible for Trump and his team,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

The designation comes under a sanctions authority approved during Russia’s 2014 invasion and illegal annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula, according to administration officials who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the White House.

Should the Trump administration move to roll back the sanctions, it would have to first notify Congress, which would have the ability to take a vote of disapproval of such a move, the officials added.

Trump promised ‘all hell will break out’ in the Middle East if Israeli hostages are not returned by the time he takes office.

The shadow fleet is made up of aging tankers bought used, often by nontransparent entities with addresses in nonsanctioning countries such as the United Arab Emirates or the Marshall Islands, and flagged in places like Gabon or the Cook Islands. Some of the vessels are owned by Russia’s state-owned Sovcomflot shipping company. Their role is to help Russia’s oil exporters elude the $60-per-barrel price cap imposed by Ukraine’s allies.

Finnish authorities suspect a Russia-linked shadow fleet vessel was involved in possible sabotage, cutting critical power and communications cables under the Baltic Sea between Finland and Estonia on Dec. 25.

The Biden administration unveiled a new $500-million military aid package for Ukraine on Thursday as Zelensky met with U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III.

Advertisement

Madhani writes for the Associated Press. AP writers David McHugh in Frankfurt, Germany, Jill Lawless in London and Matthew Lee contributed to this report.

Advertisement