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Trump’s Weak Sanctions Let Russia Dodge Pressure—Only Aggressive U.S. Enforcement Can Squeeze the Kremlin

Despite 6,400+ sanctions, Russia outsmarts U.S. restrictions through shadow networks and crypto flows. See how Moscow keeps winning the economic battle.

weak sanctions enable russia

How effective are U.S. sanctions when Russia seems to keep finding ways around them? The answer reveals a troubling pattern of weak enforcement that has allowed Moscow to sidestep economic pressure for years.

Since February 2022, the U.S. has slapped over 6,400 sanctions on Russia, targeting everything from individuals to major companies. These measures aim to cut off funding for the Kremlin’s military operations. However, critical gaps in enforcement have undermined their impact. Many sanctions rely on smart contracts to automate transaction controls, but enforcement inconsistencies limit their effectiveness.

Despite imposing over 6,400 sanctions on Russia since 2022, enforcement gaps have significantly weakened their intended economic impact.

The Trump administration notably failed to sanction any Russian oil tankers, leaving a massive loophole that Russia exploited like a highway with no speed limits.

The numbers tell a stark story. While the EU and UK have each sanctioned over 400 vessels, the U.S. has targeted only 216. This enforcement lag matters because sanctioned ships showed an 80% drop in activity when properly blocked.

Unfortunately, inconsistent enforcement and political shifts created enough wiggle room for Russia to dance around restrictions using intermediaries and shadow shipping networks.

Russia has proven surprisingly inventive at dodging sanctions. The country reroutes oil exports through friendly nations and uses alternative payment systems that bypass traditional banking. Small Russian banks still connected to cross-border payment systems help facilitate this financial shell game.

Meanwhile, cryptocurrency operators and logistics networks provide additional escape routes that U.S. authorities have barely touched. Crypto flows estimated at $80 billion over six months have created another massive avenue for sanctions evasion.

The economic impact shows both promise and frustration. U.S.-Russia trade plummeted by 15 times, and foreign investment into Russia dropped 60% between 2021 and 2025. Oil revenue declined thanks to price caps and export restrictions.

Yet Russia’s economy showed resilience, with the IMF projecting 3.6% growth in 2024 driven by wartime spending.

Recent changes offer hope. Since October 2025, the U.S. finally targeted Russia’s oil giants Rosneft and Lukoil directly. This aggressive approach could cut Russian foreign currency earnings by roughly 15%.

Success requires coordination with allies like Japan, which recently tightened its own sanctions. The EU and UK have dramatically ramped up their efforts, with coordinated sanctions now covering 247 ships jointly compared to just 23 in January.

Only through all-encompassing, coordinated enforcement can the U.S. close loopholes and apply real economic pressure. Half-hearted sanctions are like using a leaky bucket to drain a swimming pool.

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