Daily Mail: Trump hits Chinese military with punishing sanctions for buying Russian jets and missiles in new push to isolate Putin's defense and intelligence sector
* New sanctions authority lets the U.S. penalize countries that do business with Russian defense and intelligence companies and exporters
* An agency of China's military bought Russian-made jets and missiles, so the State Department is sanctioning it and its director
* Practical impact is to freeze any of their assets in the U.S. and bar them from global markets by blocking foreign exchange transactions controlled by the U.S.
* The Russian arms merchants had already been blacklisted through other American sanctions regimes
The United States hit a Chinese military organization with punishing financial sanctions for buying Russian fighter jets and missiles as it stepped up pressure on Moscow over its 'malign activities.'
It was the first time the Trump administration targeted a third country with its CAATSA sanctions, designed to punish Russia for its seizure of Crimea and other activities.
The State Department said it was applying the 2017 legislation against the Equipment Development Department of the Chinese Ministry of Defense for its purchase of Russian Sukhoi Su-35 fighter jets and S-400 surface-to-air missiles.
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Military And Intelligence News Briefs -- September 21, 2018
U.S. sanctions China for buying Russian fighter jets, missiles -- Reuters
US adds 33 Russian officials linked to defense manufacturing to blacklist -- TASS
Chinese anger at US sanctions for Russian weapons purchases -- BBC
China, Russia slam U.S. over sanctions related to their military transactions -- CBC/Reuters
Iran puts on 'show of strength' military exercise in Gulf -- Reuters
How a defense expo reflects troubles for South African military -- Defense News/AP
Serbia looks to acquire Chinese drones and the technological know-how -- Defense News
Serbia to Host NATO Disaster-Response Exercise -- Balkan Insight
Dutch defense chief opens door for more F-35s -- Defense News
Despite infighting, here’s how NATO can persevere -- Hans Binnendijk, Defense News
NATO Deputy Secretary General visits Georgia -- NATO
Azerbaijani president receives NATO deputy secretary general [UPDATE] -- Azernews
Ukraine pushes ahead to secure NATO membership -- Daily Sabah
US reverses course, certifies Russian Open Skies aircraft -- Defense News
Report: US bomb sales factored in decision to aid Saudis in Yemen -- Defense News
Trump IDs two soldiers recovered from North Korea -- Military Times
U.S. military ready to recover war remains in N. Korea but calls requests unreasonable -- Washington Post
US: Possible October talks with North Korea on war remains -- AP
Tiny US base in South Korean capital prepares to close its gates -- Stars and Stripes
$674 billion of tanks, fighter jets, subs and more to boost US military power in 2019 -- FOX News
Trump tweets throw new doubts into defense appropriations deal -- Military Times
Army Finds Fix for Dangerous Glitch in M4 and M4A1 Service Rifles -- Kit Up!
The Corps has already started fielding the new Mk13 sniper rifle -- Marine Times
How does the US Air Force plan to keep bombers affordable? -- Daniel Cebul, Defense News
White House Confirms It Has Relaxed Rules on U.S. Use of Cyberweapons -- The Wall Street Journal
Biosafety Reforms Still Lagging at Military Labs -- The New York Times
Space Force Still an Unfunded Concept as Pentagon Grasps for a Plan -- Military.com
Amazon’s Bezos To Air Force: Don’t Overthink It (But….) -- Breaking Defense
The Big E keeps costing the Navy big bucks -- Navy Times
43 years after the Vietnam war, many Navy veterans are still battling for benefits for potential Agent Orange exposure -- Business Insider
One picture shows why Beijing's 'carrier killer' missiles won't win the South China Sea in a fight -- Business Insider
Numbers game: How the Air Force is following the Army and Navy’s bad example -- Susanna V. Blume, Defense News
The Most Read Stories This Week on Military.com -- Military.com
The Trump administration is determined to use all the muscle it can muster to break the will of foreign govt's going against US interests.
ReplyDeleteIn the process though a likely consequence is the world ditching the dollar as the a reserve currency.
Good or bad thing? Depends I think. I like it but the consequences I think will be economic chaos for a few years.
Why does an independent nation need permission from another nation to buy things from another nation
ReplyDeleteThe continued application of various sanctions is a worrisome practice. Supportive at first, I now think we are walking a tightening rope. Let what is applied take effect.
ReplyDeleteI too worry we will overdo an effective tactic and targeted regimes will eventually develop an effective reply.
Every play needs a bad guy and for the US, Russia fills that need. If they don't watch out, they will force the development of a partnership whereby they will become the perennial bad guy. /s
ReplyDelete