Ukraine's allies keep hitting Russia with more sanctions and Russia keeps finding ways around them
New measures may close loopholes that have limited effectiveness of previous penalties, experts say
Ukraine's allies, including the U.S. andCanada, recently slapped new sanctions on Russia. Thelatest round of punitive measures in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine come just days after Western leaders blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin for the death of opposition leader Alexei Navalny.
Previous sanctions have targeted Russian financial institutions, the country's lucrative oil and gas exports, members of Putin's inner circle and the extremely wealthy oligarchs who support him.
But round after round of sanctions have notchanged the course of the conflict, nor do theyappear to have weakened Putin's resolve.And they certainly have not brought the country's economy to its knees, as experts say Russia has not only managed to work around the sanctions, but is bolstering itseconomy with domestic spending on the war.
"Many of us are learning how difficult it is to use sanctions as part of the overall effort to achieve our strategic effect," said Ben Hodges, a former commanding general of the U.S. Army in Europe, in an interview on CBC News Network.
"We have not closed the ring tight enough to change behaviour," he said from Vilnius, Lithuania.
Russia willing to forego economic growth
The U.S. Treasury Department announced new sanctions last Friday against more than 500 entities and individuals associated with the Russian war effort including defence manufacturing, aerospace and logistics companies as well as prison leaders allegedly connected to Navalny's death.
Canada announced its own sanctions last week, on 10 individuals and 153 entities, as did Britain and the European Union.
Sanctions have, to some extent, "achieved an economic shock to Russia," said Rachel Ziemba, an adjunct fellow at the Centre for New American Security who tracks the impacts of financial sanctions.
"The problem is that Russiais quite willing to jettison long-term economic growth," she said in an interview from New York.
In January, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) revised its Russian GDP growth projection to 2.6 per cent, up from its October 2023 prediction of 1.1 per cent, though the economy remains weaker than it wasbefore the war and the IMF predicts growth will shrink next year.
Ziemba saysthe measures unveiled last week may be more incremental than policymakers are trying to make them out to be, but they'rea necessary step in attempting to prevent Russia from circumventing previously implemented measures.
The U.S. and its allies also appear to be signaling that they will start putting greater pressure on countries and foreign entities helping Russia evade sanctions and import/export bans, said Florian Gassner, an associate professorat the University of British Columbia.
On Friday, the U.S. sanctioned several companies and individuals that allegedly supply or support Russia's military industrial base.
War economy and oil price caps
Russia did not enter the war with a great deal of domestic or external debt, said Ziemba, and it had more than $600 billion US in foreign currency and gold reserves approximately half of which has been frozen by the West.
Although its war chest has dwindledasthe conflict enters it third year, domestic defence spending is actually helping to keep the country afloat and it's a major reason the IMF revised its economic forecast for Russia this year.
"They've really reoriented their economy around awar economy," Ziembasaid. "Even automakers, suddenly, were making military tanks."
Some critics believe sanctions won't have a huge effect until the West takes a harder swing at Russia's oil and gas industry.
G7 nations and the European Union implemented anoil price capof $60 US per barrelon Russian crudein December 2022. Its aim was toslashRussia'sability to use oil revenues to fund the war without driving up global prices.
But the cap has "effectively stopped working,"said Maria Snegovaya, a senior fellow at the Centrefor Strategic and International Studies.
"One way or another, they will have to eventually address Russia's oil revenues and have to consider an oil embargo," Snegovaya told The Associated Press.
Russia has turned tonew markets for its oilin Asia and Africa, andhas found ways to get around the sanctions to keep bringing in revenue.As of Monday, abarrel of Russian crude was tradingwell above the cap at more than $77US.
Ziemba said it will be interesting to see if new U.S. sanctions on Russian shipping company Sovcomflot will change anything.
State-owned Sovcomflot, she says,is "very involved" with what is referred to as Russia's dark fleet or ghost fleet hundredsof vesselswith shadowy ownershipthat keep Russia's oil moving under the radar andcarry out ship-to-ship oil transfers in international waters.
Personal sanctions a measure of inconvenience
Pressure on Russian billionaires by freezing and seizing their personal assets including bank accounts, mansions, private aircraft and luxury yachts hasdone little to curb support for the war among the country's influential oligarchs
"The idea was if you take the people who have a modicum of power in the Russian Federation and lead them to be disaffected, then they might be in a position to if not stage an insurrection, then at least move the needle in the government," said Gassner.
Instead, he said, it's become more of an inconvenience and few have actually turned on Putin.
At the same time, The Associated Press reportedin December that of anestimated $58 billion USinfrozen and seized assets,just $5.4 million UShas been redirected to support Ukraine.
Sanctions onthe personal assets of the Russian president, whose wealth is rumoured tobe in thetens of billions, areessentially futile.
"Officially, Putin doesn't own anything," said Gassner, explaining that his material assets are located in Russia, out of international reach, and are hidden behind a network of friends, family members and shell companies.
"The West can't just, you know, use its thumb to say, 'Well, we'll target these things becausewe believe it's Putin's, even though we have no proof.' "
With files from The Associated Press and Reuters