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New Russian sanctions at-a-glance

This is the latest on the less-than-co-ordinated US and EU sanctions offensive against Russia. One of the country's largest private banks is now on the US hit-list, although not its assets under management as yet.
As part of the escalating power-game in the Ukraine, the US
Department of the Treasury has imposed yet more sanctions on
Russians - this time targeting financial institutions, energy
firms, the arms industry and "those undermining Ukraine’s
sovereignty or misappropriating Ukrainian property."
The US sanctions are as follows.
* A prohibition against US persons providing fresh finance to two
major Russian financial institutions (Gazprombank OAO and VEB)
and two Russian energy firms (OAO Novatek and Rosneft, which
recently signed a £875 million deal with British Petroleum).
* Some sort of 'designation' desiged to inconvenience eight
Russian arms firms. These are Almaz-Antey, Federal State Unitary
Enterprise State Research and Production Enterprise Bazalt, JSC
Concern Sozvezdie, JSC MIC NPO Mashinostroyenia, Kalashnikov
Concern, KBP Instrument Design Bureau, Radio-Electronic
Technologies and Uralvagonzavod.
* Another so-called 'designation' against the “Luhansk People’s
Republic” and the “Donetsk People’s Republic,” shadowy entities
that are trying to assert government-style authority over parts
of the disintegrating Ukraine, along with Aleksandr Borodai, the
self-declared “prime minister” of the Donetsk People’s
Republic.
* Another 'designation' for Feodosiya Enterprises, a shipping
firm in the Crimean peninsula which allegedly misappropriated
Ukrainian government assets.
* Another one against four Russian government officials,
including one Sergey Beseda of Russia’s Federal Security Service,
Oleg Savelyev who is Russia’s Minister for Crimean Affairs,
Sergei Neverov who works at the Duma, Russia's parliament, and
Igor Shchegolev who works directly for President Putin. The
relevant 'executive orders', whose constitutionality is
questionable, are numbered 13660 and 13661.
Gazprombank OAO has more than 40 branches in Russia and some
international subsidiaries. It specializes in private
banking and corporate finance. It provides services to more than
45,000 companies and 3 million private individuals. The other
targeted bank, VEB, is more of a development bank and a payment
agent for the Russian government.
Meanwhile, one of the organs of the EU has announced that it
wishes to persuade the governmental club as a whole to increase
sanctions against Russia, perhaps along the same lines, and
probably for the same reasons, as the US. The European Council is
asking the European Investment Bank to "suspend the signature of
new financing operations in the Russian Federation." Its website
does not say that it has done so.