US sanctions last major SWIFT-linked Russian bank
Washington has sanctioned dozens of Russian financial institutions, including Gazprombank and six of its international subsidiaries, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) announced on Thursday. Russia’s third-largest lender and primary bank for energy-related transactions, Gazprombank was the last major Russian bank that had retained access to the SWIFT interbank messaging system.
The UK and Canada imposed sanctions on Gazprombank shortly after the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, but the US had previously avoided following suit as the bank was used by EU states to pay for Russian gas. Explaining its decision to place restrictions on the bank now, OFAC claimed that Moscow was using Gazprombank as a “conduit to purchase military materiel.” The new measures mean the bank can no longer carry out any new transactions that involve the dollar-based financial system. Its assets in the US have also been frozen.
OFAC noted that it had issued new general licenses authorizing US residents to continue transactions involving Gazprombank so as to gradually wind down cooperation with it. The licenses will also allow for uninterrupted diplomatic banking activities involving Gazprombank, as well as transactions related to agricultural commodities and medicine.
Commenting on the sanctions, Gazprombank said the measures won’t affect its operations within Russia, noting that all of the banks cards, including those using foreign payment systems, will continues to function as usual. However, it warned that its UnionPay cards may stop working outside the country.
Apart from Gazprombank, the new restrictions targeted over 50 small-to-medium Russian lenders, including BCS Bank and state-owned DOM.RF, as well as some 40 Russian securities registrars and 15 Russian financial officials. The new restrictions are aimed at attempting to further curtail Russia’s use of the international financial system, the OFAC said.
“Today’s sanctions targeting Russia’s largest remaining non-designated bank [Gazprombank], as well as dozens of other financial institutions and officials in Russia, will further diminish and degrade Russia’s war machine,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said late on Thursday. She claimed that the “sweeping action will make it harder for the Kremlin to evade US sanctions and fund and equip its military.”
OFAC also issued an alert warning international financial institutions against joining Russia’s System for Transfer of Financial Messages (SPFS), the Russian alternative to SWIFT. OFAC claimed Moscow was using the system to “evade sanctions, and fund its war effort,” and said it may target foreign financial institutions that choose to join it with secondary sanctions.
Moscow has long slammed Western sanctions as illegal. It has noted on more than one occasion that they have failed to achieve their ultimate goal of destabilizing the Russian economy and isolating the country from the global financial system. Instead, they have backfired on the states that imposed them.