US senators propose Trump-backed Russia sanctions bill, India among 5 nations that could face tariffs
A bipartisan group of US senators has unveiled a long-awaited bill that could give President Donald Trump powers to impose sweeping sanctions on Russia. India
A bipartisan group of US senators has unveiled a long-awaited bill that could give President Donald Trump powers to impose sweeping sanctions on Russia. India has been named among five countries that could face tariffs for continuing to buy Russian oil as per the proposed legislation. The legislation, dubbed by some colleagues the "Lindsey Graham Russia Accountability Bill," was formally announced on Capitol Hill on Tuesday by Senators Richard Blumenthal and Jeanne Shaheen, along with Republicans Roger Wicker, Katie Britt and more than a dozen other lawmakers from both parties, news agency ANI reported. “The Russian sanctions legislation championed by my friend Sen. Graham will continue to have my full support in the Senate. We should enact this bipartisan measure to exert maximum economic pressure on Putin’s war machine and help bring this unjust war to an end,” Wicker said in a post on X. The bill comes days after the death of Senator Lindsey Graham, who spent nearly two years negotiating the measure and whom colleagues repeatedly credited as its driving force. Senator Wicker, who served alongside Graham for over three decades, called it “Lindsey Graham's greatest achievement.” Senator Blumenthal, the lead Democratic sponsor, said the bill goes far beyond tariffs, imposing full blocking sanctions on large parts of Russia's economy, its energy and financial sectors, its defence industry, oligarchs and businesspeople, and Russian President Vladimir Putin himself.
What does the bill propose? The bill authorises the administration to impose tariffs set at a rate above zero but capped well below full value on countries identified as the largest buyers of Russian oil. The five countries named are China, India, Slovakia, Hungary and Azerbaijan. The bill, once signed by President Trump, would grant him authority to hit the countries with tariff rates up to 100%, according to Bloomberg. The bill, however, exempts countries importing less than 15 per cent of their gas from Russia if they are already reducing purchases, a carve-out that shields most European allies, according to news agency ANI. Also Read | Sergio Gor denies report claiming India rejected quick trade deal with US Senators said the actual rate has not been decided and will be set by the US Trade Representative. Blumenthal said he expected it would be set high enough “to discourage strongly China, India, and other major purchasers of Russian oil and gas.” The bill also includes waiver authority, along with reporting requirements to Congress if tariffs are later lowered. Senator James Risch, chairman of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he had pushed for a separate provision cracking down on Russia's "shadow fleet" tankers used to evade existing sanctions and keep exporting oil. Lawmakers stressed the bill has been significantly narrowed from earlier versions, which reportedly could have applied tariffs to as many as 63 countries.
