U.S. Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL), along with Senators Jim Risch (R-ID), John Cornyn (R-TX), Rick Scott (R-FL), Kevin Cramer (R-ND), and Mike Braun (R-IN), today called on President Biden to ban Russian companies from the United States financial system to ensure American investors are not invertedly providing capital to fund Russia’s war against Ukraine. The Senate Republicans, representing the Senate Armed Services, Finance, and Foreign Relations Committees, also asked for secondary sanctions to block China or other adversaries from helping Russia skirt the requested sanctions on the U.S financial system.
“While we commend the actions being taken to remove Russian companies from U.S. markets, more must be done to ensure U.S. investors are not supporting Russian companies that currently enjoy access to U.S. capital markets,” the Senators wrote.
The Senators concluded,“To pressure Russia to reverse course and end its occupation of Ukraine, all appropriate economic tools must be brought to bear.”
A copy of the letter can be found here and below.
March 16, 2022
President Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20500
Dear President Biden,
We write today urging you to protect American investors from unwittingly financing Vladimir Putin’s war crimes against Ukraine through their investments in index funds, ETFs, bonds, and other securities. Many Russian companies remain present in the U.S. financial system, posing a risk to investors and providing capital to the Kremlin’s war machine.
The undersigned seek increased sanctions on these Russian companies and institutions – including capital markets sanctions and secondary sanctions on those who seek to help Russia circumvent existing and future U.S. sanctions. While we commend the actions being taken to remove Russian companies from U.S. markets, more must be done to ensure U.S. investors are not supporting Russian companies that currently enjoy access to U.S. capital markets. We ask that you immediately take the following actions:
- Impose capital markets sanctions on all Russian owned or controlled companies and entities present in the U.S. financial system and prohibit the trading of their securities on regulated U.S. exchanges. While your administration has implemented new debt and equity restrictions, blocking sanctions, and export controls on certain entities to date, and is working with European partners to restrict access to SWIFT for Russian banks, there are further steps that can and should be taken to restrict Russia’s access to U.S. capital.
- Establish secondary sanctions to deter China or any other nations, entities, or individuals from helping Russia circumvent sanctions. As documented in the joint statement between China and Russia on February 4, 2022, through the support of a new Gazprom pipeline through Mongolia and agreements on purchases of wheat, China actively backstops Russia economically. China has also refused to condemn Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. Without the financial and diplomatic support of China, Russia’s ability to carry out its invasion of Ukraine would be severely limited. We support the actions your administration has taken to deter Belarus from additional actions in support of Russia’s invasion. Similar measures should be considered to discourage any Chinese interest in increasing support for Russia’s war in Ukraine.
While we were encouraged by the administration’s efforts to sanction Gazprom, Sberbank, and VTB Bank, we strongly urge your administration to take additional action against the five other listed Russian companies already under U.S. sanctions from the 2014 invasion. We ask that full and immediate action be taken against all eight of these Russian companies and their affiliated entities to include freezing all trading of these securities immediately and suspending the purchase or sale of publicly traded Russian securities while Russia’s aggression continues. Aside from these companies, appropriate capital market sanctions on certain key Russian industries and companies should be considered, including any Russian military and cyberspace industrial complex companies and Russian energy companies who may have been complicit in Russia’s aggression toward Ukraine.
Aiding and abetting Russia’s breach of Ukraine’s sovereignty and the violations of the international rules-based order must be met with sufficient consequences in a manner that deters future aggression. Secondary sanctions remain a powerful tool that can be implemented immediately to maximize the effectiveness of sanctions already in place on Russia. To pressure Russia to reverse course and end its occupation of Ukraine, all appropriate economic tools must be brought to bear.