US to Expand Sanctions Against Russia After Ukraine Invasion

Cryptocurrency is an unlikely workaround for Vladimir Putin’s government, according to sanctions and blockchain experts.

America is moving to cut Russian Rich people and officials off from their offshore funds and limit their ability to transact within the global financial system after Russian forces started a war in Ukraine late Wednesday.

Previous sanctions, the new measures may go as far as kicking out Russia swiftly, the international messaging service used by banks to send money around the world. While cryptocurrency may be a way around it may offer an alternative way for individuals or organizations to transact, the Russian government does not like its stance on technology, and other factors may limit its use for this purpose.

Joe Biden will announce new sanctions against Russia on Thursday, he hopes that financial penalties will convince Russian President Vladimir Putin to withdraw from Ukraine and cease war efforts.

America and European Union are effectively trying to cut these officials and Rich Russians off from being able to transact with parties anywhere in the world. The move came hours after Russian military forces launched attacks on various cities and military bases in Ukraine, including in the nation’s capital of Kyiv.

Russia first announced it would send “peacekeepers” into Donetsk and Luhansk, two regions in Ukraine that Putin recognized as independent entities on Monday. Nato announced an initial slate of sanctions after this initial incursion, targeting specific people or entities.

The initial sanctions package was “designed to impose overwhelming and immediate costs to the largest financial institutions and state-owned enterprises in Russia,” Deputy National Security Advisor for International Economics Daleep Singh told reporters.

“We’re also prepared to impose powerful export controls as part of our response package,” he said at a White House press briefing. “Both financial sanctions and export controls deny something to Russia that it needs and can’t get from anywhere other than the United States or our Allies and partners. Financial sanctions deny foreign capital to Russia, and export controls deny critical technological inputs that Russia needs to diversify its economy and to deliver on Putin’s strategic ambitions in aerospace, defense, and high-tech.”

Expelling Russia from Swift means the country would have difficulty transacting with any non-Russian financial institution.

“We have other severe measures we can take that our Allies and partners are ready to take in lockstep with us, and that don’t have the same spillover effects,” he said. “But we always will monitor these options, and we’ll revise our judgments as time goes on.”

While headlines suggest crypto might be used to bypass Russian sanctions, Jacobson does not see this as a likely workaround.

Autocratic regimes would find it difficult to adopt decentralized assets, he said, and Russia, in particular, is no fan of bitcoin, although Putin once met Ethereum creator Vitalik Buterin. The country’s central bank tried to ban cryptocurrencies just weeks ago.

I think Russia probably is thinking about using bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies to evade sanctions, but on the other hand, is probably concerned about those cryptocurrencies getting too much popularity within their own country, because that impacts their own control of their own monetary system, and therefore impacts their power,”  Russia Like control he can not control cryptocurrency.

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