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3/2/2023

FACT SHEET: Disrupting and Degrading – One Year of U.S. Sanctions on Russia and Its Enablers | U.S. Department of th…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
FACT SHEET: Disrupting and Degrading – One Year of U.S.
Sanctions on Russia and Its Enablers
February 24, 2023

The United States, along with an international coalition of over 30 allies and partners, has
imposed sweeping sanctions, export controls, and other economic measures since the start
of Russiaʼs unprovoked war against Ukraine. Since February 2022, these measures have made
it harder and costlier for the Kremlin to obtain the capital, materials, technology, and support
it needs to sustain its war of aggression.

FAST STATS
Treasuryʼs O ice of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has added over 2,500 Russia-related
targets to the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons (SDN) List

[1]

since

February 2022, including approximately 2400 individuals and entities, 115 vessels, and 19
aircra .
Those designated range from senior Russian government o icials, including President
Vladmir Putin, to high net-worth individuals whose wealth is tied to the Russian state,
leaders in revenue-generating sectors, and supporters of the military-industrial complex.
Over 80% of Russiaʼs banking sector by assets are under U.S. sanctions, including the top
10 Russian-owned banks.
All members of the Russian State Duma (450) and the Federation Council (170) have been
sanctioned, as well as 47 Russian governors.
OFAC has added over 600 targets to the SDN List tied to Russiaʼs military-industrial
complex, including major Russian military manufacturing firms such as State Corporation
Rostec, Tactical Missiles Corporation JSC, and NPK Tekhmash OAO, as well as thirdcountry providers of key inputs.
OFAC has imposed five rounds of sanctions on Iranian producers of UAVs, targeting 28
individuals and entities.

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Since February 22, 2022, Treasury and State have designated over 200 targets associated
with Russian sanctions evasion, spanning across Europe, Africa, and Asia, including key
transshipment jurisdictions in the Middle East, the Eurasian Economic Union, and East
Asia.
In addition, over 60 family members of Russian elites have been designated. Moving or
hiding money through family members is a known practice of those trying to evade
sanctions.
Treasuryʼs Russia-related actions had significant downstream e ects in Belarus, which has
supported and facilitated Russiaʼs invasion. The Belarusian economy is highly dependent
on key Russian financial institutions and their subsidiaries; OFAC has sanctioned nearly
one-fi h of Belarusʼ financial sector.
OFAC has targeted Russiaʼs malign activity globally, using a wide range of authorities to
sanction entities and individuals in over 40 jurisdictions. This includes also leveraging
sanctions authorities related to Belarus, Central African Republic, Iran, malicious cyber
activities, and human rights abuse and corruption (Global Magnitsky).
OFAC has identified nearly a dozen sectors of the Russian Federation economy, allowing
sanctions to be imposed on any individual or entity determined to operate or have
operated in those sectors and expanding the United Statesʼ ability to swi ly impose
additional economic costs on Russia for its war of choice in Ukraine. Sectors include
metals and mining, quantum computing, accounting, trust and corporate formation,
management consulting, aerospace, marine, electronics, financial services, technology,
and defense and related materiel.

PRIVAT E SECTOR
More than 1,000 foreign companies reportedly have ceased or curtailed their operations in
Russia since the start of the war, stifling investment and industrial activity.
To help the compliance community e ectively implement U.S. sanctions, OFAC has issued
134 new and 104 amended Frequently Asked Questions.
To minimize the unintended negative consequences of U.S. sanctions on Russia while
ensuring a high degree of impact on Russia, and particularly to protect and preserve
agricultural, humanitarian, and energy transactions, OFAC has issued 68 new and 40
amended general licenses.

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Treasuryʼs Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) FinCEN issued four alerts, one
advisory, and a trends analysis to U.S. financial institutions identifying trends and red
flags associated with Russian illicit finance, including corruption and kleptocracy, financial
activity of Russian oligarchs, sanctions and export controls evasion and the abuse of real
estate, luxury goods, and other high-value assets.

PRICE CAPS
The G7+ price caps on Russian-origin oil and petroleum products are important tools to
reduce the revenue Russia receives to fund its illegal war in Ukraine, while also supporting
energy market stability, which is particularly important for low- and middle-income
countries hit hardest by the e ects of Russiaʼs war.
In December 2022, the 27 Member States of the European Union (EU), the members of the
G7 (the United States, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and United Kingdom) and
Australia – collectively, the Price Cap Coalition – adopted a cap of $60/barrel for crude oil
of Russian origin. In February 2023, the price cap coalition set caps on refined oil products.
These price caps are subject to ongoing review.
The price cap policy allows services providers in the Coalition to participate in trade of
seaborne Russian-origin oil only if the oil is traded below the cap—and provides importers
outside the Coalition with the leverage to negotiate heavy discounts on Russian oil.

MULT ILAT ERAL EF F ORTS
To continue close collaboration with partners and allies on sanctions, the price cap, and
other economic measures, starting in November 2021, senior Treasury o icials have taken
over 80 trips to 31 countries to coordinate on international sanctions so far.
The multilateral Russian Elites, Proxies, and Oligarchs (REPO) Task Force, consisting of
Finance, Justice, Home A airs, and Trade Ministers from Australia, Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the European
Commission has immobilized about $300 billion worth of Russian Central Bank assets.
Collectively, REPO members have blocked or frozen tens of billions of dollars worth of
sanctioned Russiansʼ assets in financial accounts and economic resources.
REPO members have seized, blocked, or frozen luxury real estate and other luxury assets
owned, held, or controlled by sanctioned Russians, valued in the many billions of dollars.
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KEY IMPACTS
Sanctions and export controls have been a key driver of major output declines, most
notably in sectors with military applications—including automotive, aerospace, and
electronics. Imperfect attempts at parallel import mechanisms and substitution from
Russian allies have not succeeded and may limit future growth.
Russiaʼs military-industrial complex and defense supply chains have been significantly
degraded by sanctions and export controls.

Depletion of Military Supplies
9,000 pieces of military equipment have been lost and di icult to replace.
Russia is facing shortages of essential components for tanks, aircra , and submarines and
is running out of serviceable munitions.
Russia has probably lost as much has 50% of its supply of tanks and has been forced to
reactivate outdated Soviet-era T-62 tanks.
O icials have touted import substitution, but in the defense industry, dependency actually
increased since 2014.

Defense Manufacturing Under Pressure
Production shutdowns have occurred at key defense-industrial facilities, including for
tanks and micro-electronics.
The share of defective microchips shipped from China is up from 2% to 40%.

Declining Defense Exports
Customers are canceling or rethinking deals worth hundreds of millions of dollars because
of sanctions risk or poor weapons performance in Ukraine and Rosoboronexport, the
sanctioned state-owned defense conglomerate, has faced supply chain challenges.
Prior to the war, Russia was the second largest arms exporter in the world. Now, Moscow
is expecting a 25% decrease, or more, in revenue for 2022.
Plans to market a next-generation heavy fighter bomber to foreign buyers have collapsed.

Technology
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Before the war, Russiaʼs plan was to build a high-tech military for future conflicts,
including a focus on AI technology.
However, sanctions and export controls have cut o Russia from much of the worldʼs
supply of microchips, including from TSMC, the Taiwanese company that manufactured
chips developed needed for Russiaʼs high-tech industries and defense sector.
The ability to manufacture locally is significantly constrained. For example, only 30% of
machine tools are Russian-made and local industry doesnʼt have the capacity to cover
rising demand.

Reliance on Inferior Suppliers
Chip restrictions may cause Russian weapons to fall a generation behind or more due to
forced reliance on less sophisticated Chinese or Southeast Asian alternatives.
Russia has had to buy inferior weapons from places like Iran, North Korea, and Belarus.

Russian industrial output has contracted for nine consecutive months, underscoring the
e ects of Western sanctions and labor shortages. Russiaʼs advanced manufacturing
industries are falling behind due to sanctions and export controls and may not recover for
years or decades.

Airline Industry Under Pressure
Russian airlines, including state-run Aeroflot, were forced to strip aircra for spare parts.
Half of the components and technologies used in the Russian aircra industry in 2021
originated from foreign countries. 95% of Russiaʼs passengers were previously carried on
foreign-made planes; the lack of access to imported parts will lead the fleet to shrink as
planes go out of service.
Russia has been forced to turn inferior suppliers like Iran for critical parts, undermining the
long-term viability of its aircra fleet.

Automotive Manufacturing in Decline
Car production was down 67% in 2022, the lowest level since collapse of the Soviet Union,
driven in part by exodus of global carmakers.
Car sales were down 59% in 2022.

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FACT SHEET: Disrupting and Degrading – One Year of U.S. Sanctions on Russia and Its Enablers | U.S. Department of th…

In the early wake of the price cap, Russian oil revenues have fallen to their lowest level in
two years, while oil export volumes are at new highs.
Just over two months a er implementation, the price cap on Russian crude oil is already
achieving its twin goals: limiting Russian revenue while avoiding a supply disruption in
global markets.
According to data from the Russian Ministry of Finance, in January 2023 government oil
revenues were nearly 60% lower than March 2022—just a er the invasion—despite oil
Russian exports rising over 15%.

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The value of Russian crude has eroded as the price cap gives importers in emerging
markets leverage to negotiate discounts.
Russia is being forced to sell its flagship crude, Urals, at larger and larger discounts as
buyers worldwide use their increased bargaining power against Russian exporters.
Since the December 5 price cap implementation, Urals discount to global benchmarks has
expanded to more than 30%.

RUSSIAʼS F ISCAL POSIT ION CONT INUES TO
DET ERIORAT E.
The Kremlin sought to mitigate economic pressure in 2022 through increased government
spending, high energy export revenues, and aggressive capital controls.
However, vulnerabilities in the economy could intensify in 2023 as energy revenues come
under pressure from Western restrictions, while increased security expenditures and
weaknesses in the real economy continue to compound.
Russiaʼs budget deficit in 2022 (2% GDP) was almost 3x pre-war expectations.
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G7 actions have limited Russiaʼs access to excess energy profits as the price cap cuts into
oil export revenues and Gazpromʼs gas exports sit at their lowest level of the post-Soviet
era.
In December and January, Russia relied on foreign reserve sales from the National Wealth
Fund to cover these record deficits.
However, around half of Russiaʼs foreign reserves have been immobilized by G7
jurisdictions, constraining Moscowʼs ability to support their economy and finance deficits
in this manner.
Some analysts have speculated that if the NWF continues to be used in this way Russia
could deplete its liquid assets in the next 2-3 years.
The Russian financial sector, which was targeted directly by international sanctions
following the invasion of Ukraine, reported a 90% decline in net profit year-on-year in
2022.

[1]

For purposes of this fact sheet, totals include any sanctions designations by the U.S. Department of State that are implemented

by OFAC and added to the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons (SDN) List. This does not include, for example,
State Department visa restrictions, or Commerce Department additions to their Entity List.

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