Sanctions
Disrupt Banking Channels on Russian Oil
[ABS News Service/29.03.2024]
Reuters news service reported that Russian oil firms face
delays of up to several months to be paid for crude and fuel as banks in China,
Turkey and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) become more wary of U.S. secondary
sanctions, eight sources familiar with the matter said.
Payment delays reduce revenue to the Kremlin and make them
erratic, allowing Washington to achieve its dual policy sanction goals – to
disrupt money going to the Kremlin to punish it for the war in Ukraine while
not interrupting global energy flows.
Several banks in China, the UAE and Turkey have boosted
their sanctions compliance requirements in recent weeks, resulting in delays or
even the rejection of money transfers to Moscow, according to the eight banking
and trading sources. Banks, cautious of the U.S. secondary sanctions, started
to ask their clients to provide written guarantees that no person or entity
from the U.S. SDN (Special Designated Nationals) list is involved in a deal or
is a beneficiary of a payment.
The sources asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of
the issue and because they are not allowed to speak to media.