Bloomberg Businessweek

(Steven Felgate) #1

8


 AGENDA


○ Trump’s administration is pursuing ways to punish
Russia. But he needs to speak up to make them efective

THE BLOOMBERG VIEW

For more commentary, go to bloomberg.com/opinion ILLUSTRATION BY EVAN COHEN

The Trump administration’s new sanctions against Russia,
imposed in response to the poisoning in the U.K. of a former
Russian spy and his daughter, are welcome. They are also
confusing, contrasting as they do the words and behavior of
President Donald Trump himself, who has repeatedly and
publicly lavished praise on Russian President Vladimir Putin.
One hopes the real U.S. strategy is to stand strong against
Russia’s transgressions. But unless Trump speaks forcefully,
no amount of punishment will deter Putin from his agenda.
The Trump administration has found many ways to push
back against Russia. It’s built on sanctions begun by Barack
Obama, approved the sale of so-called lethal defensive weapons
to Ukraine, struck Syrian military sites after Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons, and expelled scores
of Russian diplomats from the U.S. The Department of Justice
recently indicted 13 Russians for cyberhacking. The administra-
tion also rightly opposes the Nord Stream2 pipeline that would
carry gas directly from Russia to Germany.
Equally important, many of the U.S. penalties imposed
on Russia have been smartly targeted at members of Putin’s
inner circle, leading inancial institutions, and major indus-
tries; the International Monetary Fund says that Western

Making Sanctions Work


sanctions could shrink the Russian economy by 10 percent.
However, on the issue of Russian election meddling,
Trump has publicly sided with Putin against U.S. intelligence
agencies. He’s also denied that Russia is an American foe and
has called the news media “the real enemy of the people.”
He’s lauded Russia’s “cooperation” in Syria, which consists
of propping up a murderous dictator, attacking U.S.-backed
rebels, and allowing Iran to set up a proxy force on Israel’s
border. He’s consistently snubbed the U.S.’s most important
European allies. He still refuses to disclose what he and Putin
discussed behind closed doors last month in Helsinki.
Little wonder that when Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
appeared recently before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, its chairman, Republican Bob Corker of
Tennessee, asked bluntly: “Why does he say these things?”
Trump’s rhetorical contradicting of U.S. policy has real con-
sequences. It undermines sanctions, for instance. While these
measures have some direct efects, as in Iran, they work mainly
by marking a state as a global pariah. They have a strong efect
only if they are accompanied by clear moral condemnation and
an efort to pressure the ofending country to change its ways.
The sanctions prompted by the poisoning of the former
Russian spy, Sergei Skripal, will inevitably need shoring up.
Unless Russia proves it has abandoned its chemical and biolog-
ical weapons programs, the administration will need to follow
through with additional punishments. Trump’s job is to back
up the sanctions. His administration cannot make them work
without his public support.

Although the Atlantic hurricane season oicially runs from
June 1 to Nov. 30, the most active period begins on Aug. 
and typically peaks in mid-September. The National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicts as many
as 13 storms this year, down from 17 in 2017.

⊲ On Aug. 20, Venezuela
will lop five zeros of
denominations of the bolívar
and peg its value to its Petro
cryptocurrency in a bid to
quell hyperinflation.

⊲ Cigna shareholders
are likely to approve its
purchase of Express
Scripts on Aug. 24, now
that investor Carl Icahn has
dropped his opposition.

⊲ Honda begins a recall
of more than 300,
vehicles in China on Aug. 
to fix flaws in some engines
and braking systems.

⊲ Liberal groups plan rallies
for Aug. 26 to persuade U.S.
senators to vote against
Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme
Court confirmation.

⊲ From Aug. 20-23, the
U.S. Trade Representative’s
oice will hold hearings on
a proposed 10 percent tarif
on an additional $200 billion
of Chinese goods.

⊲ Greece will successfully
exit its bailout agreement
with the European Union on
Aug. 20. The country has
had three rescue packages
since 2010.

⊲ The Calm Before the Storms


Bloomberg Businessweek August 20, 2018
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