Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 20 – Many Western
and some Russian commentators have seriously misread what the new American
sanctions have done to the Russian stock market and ruble exchange rate,
US-based Russian analyst Aleksandr Nemets says. Yes, those sanctions initially
pushed down both, but both have largely recovered.
Moreover, the threat of any
additional sanctions appears to have passed as has the threat that Russia would
be cut off from the SWIFT payments system, something that would have had a most
serious impact on the Russian economy and its ability to do business (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5AD8764F6BD15).
Consequently, Nemets continues, all
the media hype notwithstanding, it is a profound mistake that Moscow now is
mired in “fear and despair.” Russians
were initially genuinely frightened that the sanctions imposed earlier this
month would be expanded upon, but when they saw that was not the case, they
breathed a sigh of relief, not despair.
There are two reasons why the
Russian equities market and ruble exchange rate, after taking an initial hit, have
come back: oil prices continue to rise, and “talk about new sanctions still
remains just that, talk.” And what
Moscow feared most, being cut off from SWIFT, now is not likely to happen.
Nemets cites with approval a comment
by the Bloomberg news agency that this reflects Moscow’s judgment about US
President Donald Trump. “Trump,” it says, “is the most valuable Putin resource.
It is crazy to deny this. And Putin will take care of Trump and not even try to
use the mountain of compromising information he has about him against him.”
The reason is simple, Nemets argues:
“as long as Trump sits in the White House, Putin will confidently keep control
in the Kremlin; and the world will become ever more chaotic.”
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