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Why Hasn't The U.S. Gone After Gazprom?
By John C.K. Daly
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 12, 2014
Amidst the deepening war of words over Moscow's annexation of Crimea, U.S.
President Barack Obama on April 28 added more Russian individuals and
companies to a sanctions list that already included influential members of
Russian President Vladimir Putin's inner circle and Bank Rossiya, which
has close ties to the Russian leadership. The new list freezes the assets
of Igor Sechin, head of Russia's major oil company, Rosneft, six other
individuals and 17 companies.
Significantly, the new U.S. list
does not include Alexei Miller, CEO of the Russian natural gas state
monopoly, Gazprom.
Although the European Union has imposed its own
tough sanctions on 48 Russian individuals, Gazprom is arguably where
daylight exists between the Obama administration and the EU on the issue
of penalizing Moscow for its actions in Ukraine.
The numbers make
it clear why. Russia is the EU's third-biggest trading partner, after the
U.S. and China; in 2012, bilateral EU-Russian trade amounted to almost
$370 billion. The same year, U.S. trade with Russia amounted to just $26
billion.
More than half of Russia's exports go to Europe, and 45
percent of its imports come from Europe,
according to the EU EUROSTAT agency. Out of 485 billion cubic meters
of gas consumed by the EU annually, Russia supplies about 160 billion
cubic meters, or almost one-third the total volume.
Germany, the
EU's economic powerhouse, has been explicit about the costs for the German
economy from increased sanctions. Anton Borner, the president of Germany's
main trade group, BGA,
warned that more than 6,000 German businesses with $105 billion of
turnover are interlinked with Russia and stand to lose if sanctions are
ratcheted up.
U.S. Representative Lois Frankel (D-FL), who
recently visited Ukraine with a Congressional delegation, has offered the
likeliest official explanation for why the White House left Gazprom and
CEO Miller untouched in the most recent round of sanctions.
In an
April 28
appearance on MSNBC, Frankel said, "I think our president is taking a
cautious approach warranted because our European allies are...trade
partners with Russia, they depend on Russia's energy. And so we have [to]
be careful because sanctions against Russia also have the good probability
of hurting our allies."
Other members of Congress have shown less
willingness to accommodate the EU's delicate economic position. In recent
days, senior members of the U.S. Senate have increased their calls for the
White House to move against Gazprom. Carl Levin (D -MI), John McCain
(R-AZ) and Bob Corker (R-TN)
want Obama
to use an executive order that allows him to punish broad sectors of
the Russian economy in response to Russia's actions in Crimea.
The
lawmakers' statements on the issue have been widely covered in the
Ukrainian and Russian press.
In an
April 12 letter to Obama, Corker, a ranking member of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, said, "Unless Russia ends its destabilization
of eastern Ukraine and drastically reduces troop levels on the Ukrainian
border immediately, further sanctions against strategic sectors of the
Russian economy, particularly targeting Gazprom and additional important
financial institutions, should be imposed within days."
After the
latest round of U.S. sanctions this week, Corker repeated that call in a
joint statement with Senator Kelly Ayotte (R-NH), the ranking member of
the Senate Armed Services Readiness Subcommittee, in which he
said, "Until Putin feels the real pain of sanctions targeting entities
like Gazprom, which the Kremlin uses to coerce Ukraine and other
neighbors, as well as some significant financial institutions, I don't
think diplomacy will change Russian behavior and de-escalate this crisis."
During an April 25 visit to the Ukrainian capital, Kiev, Levin
told reporters, "The existing authority is sufficient to take very
strong sanctioning action against Russian banks that have correspondent
accounts in the United States. The authority exists. It should be used,
and that includes Gazprom."
McCain advocated in an April 25
press release, "The United States needs to expand sanctions to major
Russian banks, energy companies, and sectors of its economy, such as the
arms industry, which serve as instruments of Putin's foreign policy. NATO
needs to move toward a robust and persistent military presence in central
Europe and the Baltic countries, including increased missile defense
capabilities. We need a transatlantic energy strategy to break Europe's
dependence on Russian oil and gas," which would include sanctions against
Gazprom, according to his office.
McCain
recently suggested he has a broader agenda in mind when he said, "The
strategy of the U.S. for saving Ukraine must be built in opposition to
Russia's gas strategy, as this will be the end of Putin and his empire."
Given Gazprom's centrality to the Russian economy, it's unlikely
that Putin won't react if and when the company comes in for Western
sanctions. In preparation for that possibility, Gazprom's subsidiary,
Gazprombank, Russia's third largest, last month
transferred
nearly $7 billion to the Central Bank of the Russian Federation.
Gazprom
has already warned that further Western sanctions could disrupt gas
exports to Europe.
And Russian Natural Resources Minister Sergei
Donskoi has made it explicit that there will be consequences for Western
energy firms that comply with sanctions. Speaking on April 24 to
journalists in Russia's far eastern city of Birobidzhan,
Donskoi said, "It is obvious that they won't return in the near future
if they sever investment agreements with us, I mean there are consequences
as well. Russia is one of the most promising countries in terms of
hydrocarbons production. If some contracts are severed here, then,
colleagues, you lose a serious lump of your future pie."
Donskoi
also expressed the certainty that if Western firms leave Russia, other
foreign energy companies would take their place.
That kind of
threatening rhetoric will only make it harder for U.S. officials to sell
an already nervous Brussels on the idea of more sanctions, if it comes to
that, and on targeting Gazprom, in particular.
Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Why-Hasnt-The-U.S.-Gone-After-Gazprom.html
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