The US is partially easing restrictions on the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) imposed under the previous US administration over Moscow’s alleged meddling in American elections, but notes it does not represent a shift in its policy.
A respective order has been published on the website of the US Department of Treasury. The agency states it “authorizes certain transactions” with the FSB “that are necessary and ordinarily incident to requesting certain licenses and authorizations for the importation, distribution, or use of certain information technology products in the Russian Federation.”
The ruling also allows transactions required for certain “actions or investigations involving the FSB,” the document states. The paper, however, did not elaborate further or offer concrete fields of cooperation where the ruling will be applicable.
Spokesperson for the White House, Sean Spicer, said the move represents a common practice by the Treasury Department of reviewing restrictions regarding certain issues.
“From what I understand it is a regular course of action,” Spicer said.
He noted that this is not a U-turn and does not “represent shift in policy.” The official did not comment further, referring all questions to the Treasury Department.
Dmitry Peskov, spokesperson for the Russian President Vladimir Putin, said “one should first understand what it [easing of sanctions] is about,” before giving a detailed response to the steps. He noted that the US never adopts sanctions when it infringes on its needs.
The restrictions on the FSB were put in place under the previous Obama administration in December 2016. It alleged that Russian intelligence, along with other security services – with the Kremlin’s backing – allegedly meddled in the US Presidential elections in November. Washington has so far offered no solid proof for the allegations.
Moscow has repeatedly denied any such involvement.
Russia is currently also subjected to a US sanction regime over the Ukrainian crisis. President Donald Trump said earlier this year that he would consider lifting parts of it in return for Moscow’s cooperation on combatting terrorists in Syria and nuclear weapons reduction. He stressed though that “it is very early” to decide on such moves just yet.
