WORLD
Russia warned it was edging closer to retaliation against Washington after the House of Representatives backed new U. S. sanctions on Moscow, while the European Union said the move might affect its energy security and it stood ready to act too.
Russia warned it was edging closer to retaliation against Washington after the House of Representatives backed new U.S. sanctions on Moscow, while the European Union said the move might affect its energy security and it stood ready to act too.
The lower house of the U.S. Congress overwhelmingly voted to impose new sanctions on Moscow on Tuesday and to force President Donald Trump to obtain lawmakers' permission before easing any punitive measures on Russia.
"This is rather sad news from the point of view of Russia-U.S. ties," said Dmitry Peskov, a Kremlin spokesman. "We are talking about an extremely unfriendly act."
He said President Vladimir Putin would decide if and how Moscow would retaliate once the fresh sanctions became law, while Russia's deputy foreign minister warned the move was taking bilateral relations into uncharted waters, killing off any hope of improving them in the near future.
The sanctions still need to be approved by the Senate and by President Donald Trump himself. But Bob Corker, chairman of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said on Wednesday the measure was likely to become law "very, very soon".
Trump, who has found his presidency embroiled in a distracting row over his associates' alleged ties to Moscow and is on the defensive over accusations Moscow helped him win election last year, has said he is keen to try to mend relations with Russia that are languishing at a post-Cold War low.
But most White House watchers believe Trump will reluctantly sign off on the new sanctions, given deep support for them among U.S. lawmakers, including fellow Republicans, and his desire to avoid being accused of being soft on Moscow.
The U.S. sanctions demarche has rattled Russia, which fears that its economy, weakened by a 2014 batch of Western sanctions imposed over its role in the Ukraine crisis, will now find it harder to recover and grow. Foreign investors could be scared off and the original sanctions would remain in place longer.
For its part, the European Union frets the new U.S. move could throw up obstacles to its firms doing business with Russia and threaten the bloc's energy supply lines.
The Kremlin, which flatly denies interfering in the 2016 U.S. presidential election to the benefit of Trump - a charge that helped propel the House action - says Washington is in the grip of what it calls anti-Russian hysteria.
Moscow has called the new sanctions "an extremely unfriendly step" that would hurt bilateral ties and international trade.
Peskov complained of a blow against international law. But he said Moscow would wait until the sanctions became law before fully analysing them and deciding how to respond.
The new sanctions legislation risks sinking Trump's own agenda to improve ties with Moscow altogether.
"UNCHARTED TERRITORY"
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told the Interfax news agency that relations were now entering "uncharted territory in a political and diplomatic sense".
Moscow had initially hoped that Trump, who made upbeat statements about Putin before winning the White House, would work to repair the U.S.-Russia relationship.
But it has watched with frustration as the vote-meddling allegations have killed off hopes of any detente despite what it considered a positive first meeting between Trump and Putin at a G20 meeting in Germany earlier this month.
Ryabkov said the latest sanctions step in Congress left no room to improve relations in the near future.
He also made clear Moscow was growing tired of showing restraint over what it sees as a series of diplomatic slights.
The Foreign Ministry said earlier this month that too many American spies were operating in Russia under diplomatic cover and that it might expel some of them to retaliate for the expulsion of 35 Russian diplomats last year by then-President Barack Obama's administration.
That warning reflected rising frustration in Moscow over the Trump administration's refusal to hand back two Russian diplomatic compounds seized by the Obama administration at the same time as the diplomats were sent home.
Putin opted not to retaliate immediately at the time, saying he would wait to see what the new Trump administration would do.
However, many Russian politicians increasingly believe Trump's political foes and Congress have successfully squeezed the U.S. president's room for manoeuvre on Russia to almost nil and they have nothing to lose by retaliating themselves.
Konstantin Kosachyov, who heads the foreign relations committee in Russia's upper house of parliament, urged the Kremlin to devise a "painful" response and said Russian lawmakers had already begun to discuss how best to hit back.
EUROPEAN UNION ANGER
In Brussels, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said the EU was ready to act "within a matter of days" if it felt the new U.S. sanctions undermined the bloc's energy security.
Brussels fears the new sanctions will damage European firms and oil and gas projects on which the EU is dependent.
"The U.S. bill could have unintended unilateral effects that impact the EU's energy security interests," Juncker said in a statement after a meeting of European Commissioners.
"This is why the Commission concluded today that if our concerns are not taken into account sufficiently, we stand ready to act appropriately within a matter of days. America first cannot mean that Europe's interests come last."
The Commission said the U.S. House bill demonstrated that a number of EU concerns had been taken into account, but did envisage sanctions on any company, including European, that worked on Russian energy export pipelines.
That, it said, could affect maintenance and upgrades of pipelines in Russia feeding natural gas to Europe via Ukraine, or projects crucial to the EU's energy diversification goals, such as the Baltic Liquefied Natural Gas project.
"The EU is fully committed to the Russia sanctions regime. However, G7 unity on sanctions and close coordination among allies are at the heart of ensuring the full implementation of the Minsk Agreements. This is a core objective that the EU and the US share," Juncker said.
The 2015 deal mandated a ceasefire between Ukrainian government forces and pro-Russian separatists, a pullback of heavy weapons and elections in rebel-held territory. But little has been done, and sporadic fighting continues.
The European Union, the Commission also said, was raising its concerns via "all diplomatic channels".
(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)
Shimla, Kasauli receive season’s first snow, watch video here
5 ways to study in IIT without clearing JEE Advance
'He is working hard...': Sunil Gavaskar praises Virat Kohli despite poor run in Adelaide Test
UPSC coach claims IPS trainee broke glass on his head at Delhi wedding, FIR lodged
Meet man who once worked as agent, now has Rs 49110 crore net worth, his business is...
This woman wins over Rs 1 lakh for not using phone for 8 hours
World's richest man Elon Musk’s Grok AI now FREE for all users, targets ChatGPT, Google Gemini
Who is Abu Mohammed al-Golani? Syrian rebel leader toppled President Bashar Assad's regime
Shahid Afridi breaks silence on India’s Champions Trophy travel stance, says 'there is no....'
IND vs BAN: Bangladesh beat India by 59 runs to defend U19 Asia Cup title
WATCH: Man beats bank manager over TDS deduction on fixed deposit, video goes viral
Meet Rajender Meghwar, who has become first Hindu officer in Pakistan police, he is from...
Canada: 20-year-old Indian shot dead in Edmonton, chilling video surfaces
IND vs AUS: Rohit Sharma provides massive update on Mohammed Shami’s return after 2nd Test loss
KING complimenting...: Shah Rukh Khan’s sweet gesture at Delhi wedding goes viral, WATCH
Meet Shantanu Dwivedi who topped CLAT 2025 from UP, secures AIR…
Meet man, not Indian, who leads business worth Rs 50000000 in Bengaluru just by selling...
Japanese couple recreates Shah Rukh Khan-Kajol's iconic K3G scene with adorable twist, watch
Netherlands: Five die after explosion erupts in building in The Hague
Haryana boy rides on car roof, says policeman father will protect him, video goes viral
Rekha recalls performing dandiya with Amitabh Bachchan in Suhaag, says 'khud hi har angh angh'
Diljit Dosanjh's fever hit Bengaluru metro as fans sing 'Ikk Kudi', here's what happened next, watch
THIS Shark Tank India company gave 40X return in 3 years for Ashneer Grover, Peyush Bansal, it is...
The end of an era: Assad's fall leaves Syria at a crossroads
Pushpa 2 stampede: 8-year-old boy shows signs of improvement, still not conscious
J-K: Two police personnel found dead with bullet injuries in Udhampur, probe underway
Delhi-NCR Update: AQI continues to remain in 'poor' category, likely to worsen on...
Woman makes saree from old newspaper, takes 4 hours to drape it, watch viral video
'Plastic pehen liya': Malaika Arora grooves with AP Dhillon in little black dress, netizens react
What is 'phrogging'? The bizarre reality strangers in your house, know more about it here
SHOCKING! Family relies on Google maps to reach Goa, ends up in..., here's what happened
Jaishankar responds to Trump's threat to BRICS nations: 'India has no interest in...'
Viral video: Little girl’s adorable dance to Janhvi Kapoor’s ‘Chuttamalle’ wins hearts, WATCH
Nita Ambani owns world’s most expensive shawl, it costs Rs…
Meet woman, DU graduate, who left Azim Premji's Rs 311000 crore company after 3 years due to...
IND vs AUS: Morne Morkel provides major update on Jasprit Bumrah's injury scare
This woman, Padma Shri awardee, was once paid only Rs 76 for singing in Salman Khan’s superhit film
DNA TV Show: What is green cess for vehicles entering Uttarakhand?
WPL 2025 auction date, player list announced: Check time, venue and more
Rishabh Pant left Delhi Capitals for a bigger paycheck? DC coach makes startling revelation
'We have many....': Unacademy CEO Gaurav Munjal denies Rs 800 crore sale deal with Allen
Delhi Weather Update: AQI dips to 'poor' category again, rain expected on....
Amol Palekar has THIS to say about superstar Rajesh Khanna’s arrogance: 'He felt need to show...'
Why people hear pulse in their ears, know the reason here
Major update on Vande Bharat sleeper trains, Railway minister says, 'The first...'
IND vs AUS: Travis Head breaks silence on Mohammed Siraj's outburst during Adelaide pink-ball Test
After divorce AR Rahman to take one-year break from music? Son AR Ameen clarifies: 'This is...'
Mumbai: 25-year-old model dies after being run over by water tanker in Bandra