
US President Donald Trump’s administration may leave the new legislation “toothless,” according to the outlet
US President Donald Trump’s administration is pushing to dilute a stringent Senate bill aimed at imposing harsh new sanctions on Russia, The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on Friday, citing sources. The proposed legislation includes a steep 500% tariff on imports from any country that continues to buy oil, gas, uranium, or other key commodities from Moscow.
The sanctions bill was introduced in early April by a bipartisan group of senators led by Republican Lindsey Graham and Democrat Richard Blumenthal. In addition to the tariffs, the measure includes secondary sanctions targeting countries that maintain commercial ties with Russia. Graham described the bill as “one of the most draconian sanctions bills ever written” and the restrictions as “bone-crushing.”
According to WSJ, Trump fears that the bill could harm his efforts to improve relations between the United States and Russia, which he is trying to combine with ending the conflict between Moscow and Kiev.
In recent weeks, White House officials have “quietly contacted” Graham’s office to urge him to water down the bill. They have suggested adding exceptions to the bill that would allow the president to choose who would be subject to the restrictions, the newspaper’s sources said.
In particular, Graham was asked to replace the bill’s mandatory language, substituting “shall” with “may.”
While any administration could ask for changes in a bill like this one, “eliminating the mandatory nature of sanctions would render Graham’s bill toothless,” WSJ added, citing staffers. They also stressed that Trump “already has discretion to impose sanctions.”
Blumenthal confirmed to WSJ that there had been “private negotiations” with Trump’s administration, but declined to comment on the substance of it. “We’re moving ahead and the White House is included in our conversations,” he said.
Speaking in the Oval Office on Thursday, Trump told reporters that the sanctions bill moving through the US Senate would be “guided by me,” but suggested it might be better to let Russia and Ukraine continue fighting “for a while” before “pulling them apart.”
READ MORE: Trump threatens to sanction both Russia and Ukraine
Russia has consistently criticized Western sanctions, calling them illegal, and maintains that they have failed to inflict lasting economic damage.
In March, President Vladimir Putin said that a total of 28,595 sanctions had been imposed on Russian companies and individuals in recent years – more than the total number on all other countries combined. According to the president, the West sought to eliminate the country as a competitor, but its economy has only grown more resilient under pressure.