By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
The Limits Of Economic Warfare
Over the past decade,
economic sanctions emerged as Washington’s preferred policy tool to deal with
various concerns, from hostile governments in Iran and Venezuela to
international drug trafficking. Sanctions became popular because officials saw
them as a low-cost tool that could hurt the United States’ foes. The 2015 Iran
nuclear deal, which Iran agreed to after years of devastating sanctions, seemed
to vindicate policymakers’ view that sanctions could force adversaries into
strategic concessions. Under U.S. President Donald Trump, renewed sanctions
against Iran and sanctions targeting Venezuela were widely seen as effective in
debilitating those countries’ economies.
Against this
backdrop, when Russian President Vladimir Putin launched an invasion of Ukraine
in February 2022, the Western response was immediate: the United States and its
allies slammed Russia with sanctions and other economic restrictions. But a
year later, the effectiveness of these important lessons is at its limits.
Sanctions and export have been useful in undermining Russia’s financial
resources and industrial base, but they have done little to change the
Kremlin’s strategic calculus.
As Western
policymakers dig in for a protracted conflict with
Russia and an era of geopolitical great-power competition with China, they
should recognize that sanctions can damage their targets but rarely succeed in
making those targets change course. Sanctions are not a panacea, and, as
Ukraine’s victories over Russia on the battlefield have demonstrated, economic
warfare is no substitute for the real thing. The United States and its allies
must invest in various tools to defend their interests and values rather than
expect too much economic warfare.
Tale Of The Tape
U.S. policymakers
began planning major sanctions on Russia in late 2021, as U.S. President Joe
Biden grew concerned about the prospect of a wide-scale Russian invasion of
Ukraine. Initially, policymakers sought to use the threat of sanctions,
alongside bolstered security assistance to Kyiv and diplomatic overtures to
Moscow, to dissuade Putin from invading. Western officials clarified that the
economic damage of an invasion would be significant and qualitatively different
from the measures Russia faced in 2014 when it first invaded Ukraine. But Putin
was undeterred. He chose to invade—likely assessing that the toll of punitive
sanctions would be an acceptable price for the quick capture of Ukrainian
territory.
Once Russia invaded,
the United States and its allies swiftly imposed economic costs to signal
resolve and degrade Russia’s financial reserves and military might in
anticipation of a protracted conflict. Within a week of Russian tanks crossing
into Ukraine, the United States and its G-7 partners had leveled sweeping
sanctions on Russia’s central bank and several of Russia’s most significant
commercial banks, oligarchs, and political operatives, as well as on the
country’s military-industrial complex. Moreover, the West instituted sweeping
export controls to reduce Russian access to semiconductors and other key
high-tech products.
Sanctions initially
rattled markets, with the ruble plunging and Russia forced to double domestic
interest rates to stem capital flight. Export controls had a compounding effect
on Russian military-industrial production over the last year, with Moscow
forced to turn to Iran and North Korea for ammunition and weapons and with
other metrics of industrial production, such as manufacturing cars and
slumping. But by late 2022, it was increasingly apparent that Russia had
weathered the initial economic storm better than many Western officials and
experts had expected: Russia’s economy contracted by more than two percent in
2022, a sharp reversal from the five percent growth in 2021, but a dip not
nearly as severe as some initial estimates of a ten percent or greater decline
in GDP.
Russia’s economy
proved resilient for three main reasons. First, Russia was initially able to
profit from its war. Oil and gas comprised nearly half of Russia’s budget
before the war. Geopolitical uncertainty surrounding the war led to high energy
prices for most of 2022, allowing Russia to bolster its oil revenues by an
estimated 20 percent—a significant cushion against the impacts of Western
sanctions.
Second, Russia was
prepared. In the years before the war, Russia had worked to insulate itself
from Western sanctions. Moscow withdrew its reserves from the U.S. financial
system in 2018 and bolstered its holdings of gold. It built domestic interbank
transfer and payment mechanisms that successfully handled domestic payments and
those between Russia and its allies. Russia deepened diplomatic relations with
China, India, and countries in the Middle East, providing new outlets after
trade with the West collapsed. And once sanctions were imposed, Russia adopted
macroeconomic policies, such as capital controls and bailouts to firms hit by
sanctions, to blunt the shock. Such measures will not ensure Russia’s long-term
economic health, but they did temper the near-term economic impact of Western
sanctions.
Third, unlike the
“maximum pressure” economic warfare the United States has waged in recent years
against Iran, North Korea, and Venezuela, sanctions on Russia have been
somewhat more limited in scope. Consumer goods have generally been exempt.
Dozens of Russian banks remain connected to the international financial system,
providing a financial conduit for trade that has not fallen under sanctions.
The West has broadly refrained from introducing secondary sanctions that seek
to prevent countries such as China and the United Arab Emirates from trading
with Russia.
The Regime Endures
To be sure, sanctions
will continue to drag Russia’s economy and industrial base. Perhaps most
importantly, introducing a price cap on Russian oil exports in late 2022, which
effectively forces Russia to sell oil at prices well below global benchmarks,
has contributed to Russia’s budget falling into a deficit and will further cut
into revenues in the months ahead. Over the longer term, Russia will suffer
from losing the estimated 500,000 Russians who have left the country, a talent
drain that will have long-term ramifications. Export controls will continue to
degrade Russia’s manufacturing base. Actions to target evasion and go after
broader categories of goods, such as those that the G-7 announced last month to
mark the war’s first anniversary, will steadily cause further economic damage.
In the months ahead, Western policymakers should also target other categories
of Russian exports, such as metals, and try to further reduce Russia’s oil revenues
by lowering the value of the oil price cap even more.
Yet policymakers
should recognize that sanctions and export controls will not affect Putin’s
strategic calculus, which will be shaped much more heavily by events on the
battlefield. Authoritarian regimes in recent years have withstood shocking
levels of economic pain: the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
survived a 50 percent economic decline between 2010 and 2020, and Venezuela’s
economy shrank by three-fourths between 2014 and 2020. Putin views victory in
Ukraine as essential to his ambitions, if not his survival. Sanctions should
continue to focus principally on constraining Putin’s ability to sustain his
war and forcing him to reckon with more severe domestic tradeoffs rather than on
changing Russian objectives.
That said, Western
policymakers can use sanctions to support more immediate goals. First, the G-7 should
redouble early efforts to use Russia’s frozen assets and other resources abroad
to support Ukraine. The G-7 recently said it would keep Russian assets in their
member states frozen until Russia and Ukraine reach a diplomatic resolution and
Russia “pays for the damage it has caused” to its neighbor. They are
practically speaking. However, any such settlement would likely be years in the
future. Western countries will not be willing to finance Ukraine’s war
indefinitely. Handing Russia’s frozen assets to Ukraine offers a way to
continue supporting the country’s defense.
Western countries can
also use the tariffs they have imposed on the Russian goods they continue to
import as a source of support for Ukraine. Last month, for example, the United
States hiked tariffs on aluminum imports from Russia to 200 percent. These
tariffs force Russian exporters to offer lower prices and encourage Western
importers to diversify to other suppliers. But the money raised with these
tariffs should fund weapons purchases and financial support for Ukraine—sending
a message to Putin that Russia’s exports will ultimately underwrite Ukraine’s
war effort.
Finally, even if
sanctions will not alter Putin’s calculus in the near term, history suggests
that the prospect of the lifting of sanctions can be a helpful incentive over
the long term. Fifteen years after Libya’s 1988 bombing of a passenger jet over
Scotland, the prospect of sanctions relief helped encourage Libya to offer a
settlement to the victims. In 2017, the prospect of relief from 20 years of
sanctions helped persuade the Sudanese government to cease its support of
terrorism and reduce its destabilizing regional activities. Years from now,
after the Ukraine war is resolved on the battlefield, sanctions relief can still
be a useful chip in broader negotiations to reintegrate Russia into the West.
The Full Arsenal
The primary lesson of
Western sanctions on Russia is one that sanctions experts and practitioners
have long noted: officials should not rely too much on such measures. Sanctions
are a valuable supporting tool but will rarely be a magic bullet or radically
alter the decision calculus of an adversary in the short term.
In the context of the
West’s overall strategy toward Ukraine—a strategy that has been enormously
successful in uniting the West, repelling much of Russia’s initial assault, and
at eliminating Russia’s chances of conquering Ukraine—a related lesson is also
clear. Countries continue to operate in a hard-power world.
Ukraine’s fighting on
the battlefield and Western support for Ukraine’s military has been by far the
most critical drivers of Russia’s failure in the conflict. And the success of
Ukraine’s defense and the failures of the Russian military will be a greater
deterrent to military adventurism by other potential adversaries, such as
China, which will be the prospect of economic costs. The United States and its
allies must be prepared to credibly threaten—and use—a force to preserve the
broader peace and defend their interests.
Fortunately,
policymakers in the United States and worldwide understand this fact. Planned
military expenditures are up across G-7 countries. The United States is working
to bolster military alliances with countries such as Australia and the
Philippines and is trying to expand and speed military deliveries to Taiwan.
These are critical steps to protect U.S. allies and the United States’ national
security. U.S. officials also need to think more creatively about other tools. For
example, discreetly aiding an ally such as Taiwan to bolster its offensive
cyber capabilities, which could be deployed before a Chinese attack, could
serve as a more effective deterrent than the prospect of economic sanctions.
Better information
tools are critical, as well. In the run-up to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the
Biden administration was quite creative in disclosing intelligence regarding
Russia’s plans, helping Ukraine prepare for the invasion and galvanizing a
global response. But the United States has been much less effective at
countering Russia’s messaging in the developing world. The Kremlin has expanded
efforts to promote pro-Russian and anti-Western narratives regarding the
conflict. The failure of the United States and its allies to develop tools in
the information space is even more evident in Russia, where popular support for
the war appears to remain strong. The United States needs to invest more
heavily in information tools to ensure that it boosts its favored narratives,
not just in like-minded countries but also in nonaligned states and, to
whatever extent possible, within Russia and other authoritarian countries.
In late 2021, the
U.S. Treasury issued a report on the U.S. use of sanctions. As it said in the
opening, “After the September 11, 2001 attacks, economic and financial
sanctions … became a tool of first resort to address a range of threats to the
national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States.” The
principal lesson of U.S. sanctions on Ukraine is that sanctions are less
valuable as a tool of the first resort than as a supporting tool for U.S.
national security. Washington should be at least as focused on developing and
harnessing the other tools as it has been on deploying its tools of economic
coercion.
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