RT.com
08 Jun 2025, 20:57 GMT+10
The senators behind the bone-crushing legislation are not willing to challenge the White House, according to the outlet
The latest drive in the US Congress for more sanctions on Russia, spearheaded by Senator Lindsay Graham, is now stalled due to President Donald Trump's opposition, Bloomberg reported over the weekend.
The "bone crushing" legislation that would impose a 500% tariff on countries that buy Russian energy, uranium, and other raw materials has more than 80 co-sponsors in the Senate, which Bloomberg described as "veto-proof backing." But lawmakers are still hesitant to challenge the president, the outlet claimed.
Earlier this week, Trump said he had not even looked at the bill and would only consider sanctions "at the right time." His position "put the brakes" on a push to advance the measure as soon as this month, according to Bloomberg. Graham has previously said he planned to do so before the G7 summit scheduled for June 15-17 in Canada, but the effort is now "on hold," Bloomberg reported.
On Thursday, the Republican senator wrote on X that he had "coordinated closely with the White House in this endeavor from day one," adding that the bill was only aimed at giving Trump "more tools when it comes to Russia."
The bill's Democrat co-sponsor Richard Blumenthal told Bloomberg that he and Garaham were still working on making the bill "more acceptable" to the White House.
On Thursday, Trump told journalists he had a "deadline" in his "brain" and would decide when to act if it became clear that a peace deal between Moscow and Kiev could not be reached. He also stated that he was willing to impose sanctions against both Russia and Ukraine.
The president said that the Senate's sanctions bill would be "guided by me," but suggested it might be better to let Russia and Ukraine continue fighting "for a while" before "pulling them apart." Trump also expressed his concern about recent Ukrainian drone attacks on long-range nuclear-capable Russian bombers, saying it had increased the risk of escalation by giving Moscow a reason to retaliate.
Moscow has accused Kiev of escalating its attacks in an effort to undermine US-backed peace talks. Russia has also claimed that Trump is receiving "filtered" information about the conflict from those pushing Washington to support Ukraine.
(RT.com)
Get a daily dose of St Petersburg Star news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to St Petersburg Star.
More InformationSEOUL, South Korea: South Korea's new president, liberal Lee Jae-myung, took office on June 4 after a dramatic and chaotic few months....
LONDON, UK: As global tensions rise and Europe's defense posture shifts, the UK is ramping up its military readiness with a 1.5 billion...
The senators behind the bone-crushing legislation are not willing to challenge the White House, according to the outlet ...
The senators behind the bone-crushing legislation are not willing to challenge the White House, according to the outlet The latest...
Moscow [Russia], June 8 (ANI): Russia has become the largest foreign investor in Iran's economy in 2024, with investment volumes projected...
US President Donald Trump's administration may leave the new legislation toothless, according to the outlet ...
BEIJING, China: The public security bureau in Guangzhou, a city in China, has announced a secret reward for more than 20 people it...
THE HAGUE - The International Criminal Court (ICC) has strongly condemned the United States for imposing sanctions on four of its judges,...
LOS ANGELES, California: As obesity rates among American teenagers climb to historic levels, more families and doctors are cautiously...
BERLIN, Germany: Germany has taken its first significant fiscal step to jumpstart its slowing economy. This week, the cabinet approved...
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan: Pakistan's army said on June 4 that its security forces raided a militant hideout and killed 14 insurgents during...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: The United Nations General Assembly has elected five countries to join the Security Council starting January...