Paul
Goble
The so-called “Kremlin Report” of
the US government even though it has not yet been accompanied by new sanctions
is already having a negative impact on Russian companies, according to former
Russian finance minister Aleksey Kudrin (interfax.ru/business/599206
and dailystorm.ru/news/kudrin-kremlevskiy-doklad-my-perezhivem-no-on-uzhe-navredil-rossii).
Both the firms and the Russian
government have sought to minimize these consequences and were breathing much
more easily when sanctions were not imposed at the time the list was issued,
the head of the Moscow Center for Strategic Planning says; but more sanctions
may come and companies are already facing a different financial situation in
dealings with foreign banks.
In support of that view, Vagit
Alekperov, the president of LUKOIL, tells Dozhd television that after the report
was published, the price of shares in his company declined (tvrain.ru/news/glava_lukojla_dopustil_problemy_s_kreditami_iz_za_kremlevskogo_doklada-457180/
and sobkorr.ru/news/5A7D696F1C28E.html).
And other analysts
have suggested that one of the reason companies whose heads are on the list are
now in difficulty is that other companies view it as more risky and even potentially
dangerous to themselves to maintain any contacts with them (rbc.ru/opinions/politics/09/02/2018/5a7c5e679a79473cb026591c?from=center_6).
It is not clear whether such
statements will lead those in Washington opposed to new sanctions to delay even
further – it is certainly the case that the Kremlin would be pleased if that
were the case – but it is certain that the list, however defective and so far
without accompanying sanctions – is having an effect in Russia that members of
the elite can feel.
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