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100 Days of War: the Sanctions Response to Russia’s Invasion
100 days into Russia’s (second) invasion of Ukraine, how has the international sanctions response changed? What should you expect for the next 100 days? Reduced focus on individuals, prioritization of broader economic sanctions, and efforts to enforce existing restrictions will all play a role.
What Are Countries Doing to Counter Russia’s War?
Over 140 countries voted against Russia’s war at the UN, but only 45 have imposed sanctions against Russia. Why? There is the question of political will, but a more immediate explanation is the fact that most countries do not have an autonomous sanctions program, instead relying on the UN or EU to adopt sanctions which they implement.
Russia Is Now the World’s Most Sanctioned Country
Russia Is Now the World’s Most Sanctioned Country. The crippling economic sanctions which targeted Iran were adopted over the course of nearly 10 years. Half of the sanctions adopted against Russia have been implemented in the course of 10 days.
Russia is now subject to over 5000 different targeted sanctions, more than Iran, Venezuela, Myanmar and Cuba combined.
Impact of Sanctions on Russia
The EU, US, Australia, Canada, Japan, Singapore Switzerland and others imposed over 2200 new sanctions against Russian politicians, oligarchs, banks and energy and defense firms since February 22 bringing the total of Russia-focused sanctions to over 4000. Russia is now more sanctioned than North Korea. Data updated as of 28 February, 8AM EST.