Moscow
has fired back at the latest round of US sanctions targeting Russian
interests, as Washington blacklisted one Russian company and four
individuals for their alleged dealings with North Korea.
On
Tuesday, the US Treasury revealed it had imposed sanctions on 16
Russian and Chinese nationals and companies for their alleged
dealings with North Korea. The Treasury claims the sanctions are in
line with the internationally agreed measures against North Korea’s
missile and nuclear weapons programs. The companies are accused of
working with blacklisted individuals, helping develop the North
Korean energy sector, help it place workers abroad or move money from
abroad. As a result, their US assets are frozen and Americans are
forbidden from doing business with them.
“It
is unacceptable for individuals and companies in China, Russia, and
elsewhere to enable North Korea to generate income used to develop
weapons of mass destruction and destabilize the region,”Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement.
“We
are taking actions consistent with UN sanctions to show that there
are consequences for defying sanctions and providing support to North
Korea, and to deter this activity in the future.”
Reacting
to the sanctions, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov
issued a statement expressing
disappointment, and warning Washington that Russia was working on a
response.
“Against
such a depressing backdrop, the lip service from American
representatives about the desire to stabilize bilateral relations is
extremely unconvincing,” Ryabkov
said.
“We
have always and will always support resolving our existing
differences through dialogue. In recent years, Washington in theory
should have learned that for us the language of sanctions is
unacceptable, and the solutions to real problems are only hindered by
such actions. So far, however, there doesn’t seem to be an
understanding of such obvious truths.
“Nevertheless,
we do not lose our hope that the voice of reason will sooner or later
prevail, and that our American colleagues will be aware of the
futility and detrimental nature of further sliding down the spiral of
sanctions.
“In
the meantime, we are beginning to work out the inevitable response to
this situation.”
The
companies under sanction include Gefest-M, a Moscow-based firm
accused of acquiring metals for a North Korean company, and Mingzheng
International Trading, a Chinese and Hong Kong-based bank that
supposedly conducted transactions on behalf of North Korea.
Andrey
Klimov, a senior Russian senator, said that the US sanctions against
Gefest-M and the others lack legitimacy.
“These
sanctions are illegal in themselves, because the only thing
recognized by international law is the sanctions of the UN Security
Council,” Klimov
told Interfax.
“We
must react in principle to this insane and confrontational policy.
The toolbox is rich, let’s hope that we will act consistently,
reasonably, professionally and effectively.”
Klimov’s
words were echoed by the Chinese government, with a spokesperson
saying Beijing
“opposes
unilateral sanctions out[side] of the UN Security Council framework.”
“We
strongly urge the US to immediately correct its mistake, so as not to
impact bilateral cooperation on relevant issues,” the
spokesperson said, as quoted by the Financial
Times.
At
the same time, the US Department of Justice also filed two complaints
to forfeit over $11 million from two Asian companies for allegedly
laundering funds for North Korea.
The
DoJ alleges that the two companies violated the international
sanctions against North Korea and indirectly supporting its missile
and nuclear weapons programs.
"The
United States filed two complaints today seeking imposition of a
civil money laundering penalty and to civilly forfeit more than $11
million from companies that allegedly acted as financial facilitators
for North Korea," read
the statement.
Proceedings
have been launched against Velmur Management Pte Ltd., based in
Singapore, as well as the Chinese company Dandong Chengtai Trading
Co. Ltd.
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