U.S. lists Russians for penalties

Former NATO chief questions Trump’s delay on sanctions

WASHINGTON -- President Donald Trump's administration on Thursday gave Congress a list of Russian officials who may soon become off-limits to anyone who wants to avoid U.S. sanctions, as criticism mounted over the administration's tardy execution of new penalties on Moscow.

Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the former NATO chief and adviser to Ukraine's leader, said Russian President Vladimir Putin "must be laughing right now" at how successfully he's undermined Western democracy. He said the lack of answers from the administration would be seen as a sign of weakness that Putin would exploit.

"He's achieved much more than he could have ever dreamed of when it comes to undermining the credibility of Western democratic institutions," Rasmussen said in an interview. "When he's watching the ongoing discussion here in Washington, I think it's unbelievable for him that he could achieve that much for a very modest investment in whatever he might have invested in interference in the election or whatever."

The former prime minister of Denmark, Rasmussen joined a growing chorus of Russia critics expressing exasperation that an Oct. 1 deadline came and went without new penalties to punish Russia for interfering in the U.S. election. A law Trump signed in August required the administration to produce a list of individuals linked to Russia's defense and intelligence agencies. Anyone who does business with those individuals could then be hit themselves with U.S. sanctions.

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With pressure building, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson approved the belated list and authorized its release, State Department spokesman Heather Nauert said.

Tillerson's deputy spoke Thursday to Republican Sen. Bob Corker, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman and one of those who sought an explanation for the delay. The State Department also was sending others in Congress the list of individuals, along with guidance about how businesses and foreign countries can avoid running afoul of the sanctions, officials said.

Tillerson has said one reason for the delay has been concern about how the sanctions may affect business and major U.S. allies who do business with Russia's defense and intelligence sectors. Turkey, a NATO ally, has a deal with the Kremlin to buy the S-400, Russia's most advanced air-defense missile system. And key security partner Saudi Arabia recently struck an array of deals with Moscow, including contracts for Russian weapons.

Although the list has not yet been made public, it's expected to be released more broadly in the coming days, giving business and foreign countries a chance to wind down transactions with the off-limits individuals and entities. A three-month grace period will expire Jan. 28, Nauert said.

Many of the Russian officials have previously been targeted by U.S. sanctions, said individuals familiar with the list given to Congress, who weren't authorized to discuss it publicly and requested anonymity.

The new, congressionally required sanctions were in addition to existing U.S. penalties on Russia for its support of separatists in eastern Ukraine and the 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region. In a letter to Trump this week, 20 Democratic lawmakers said the administration had done "nothing to hold Russia accountable" for interfering in the 2016 election.

"This inaction is baffling and unacceptable. It allows Russia or any other hostile actor to believe they can attack American democracy with impunity," said New York Rep. Eliot Engel and the other Democrats.

Rasmussen said Thursday that the lack of clear communication from the administration about the exact obstacles was muddying the intended U.S. message that Russian aggression and interference won't be tolerated.

"If there are such legal complications, the administration should as soon as possible engage with Congress to solve those problems, at least inform Congress about those obstacles," Rasmussen said. "Otherwise, the administration will leave the suspicion it's because of a hesitation."

A Section on 10/27/2017

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