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How Russia’s economy grows despite thousands of Ukraine war sanctions | 60 Minutes

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Countries have imposed thousands of sanctions on Russia since it launched its unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, but more than two years later, Russia’s economy is growing.

In 2022, the architect of the sanctions, Daleep Singh, predicted they would bring Russia’s economy to its knees. But Russia’s economy is predicted to grow over 3% this year, according to the International Monetary Fund – that’s more than the U.S. and Europe. 

Russian President Vladimir Putin has also turbo-charged spending to fuel the war machine, Singh, the deputy national security adviser for international economics at the White House, said. His plan has come with a cost of sky-high inflation around 9% and interest rates of nearly 19%.

“I don’t think anybody should mistake Russia’s rebound with resilience,” Singh said. “On the surface, Russia’s economy may appear to be a fortress, but underneath the foundations are fragile.”

Breaking down the Russia sanctions

After Russia invaded Ukraine, 45 countries directed more than 5,000 sanctions at Russian officials, institutions and companies, targeting everything from diamonds and semiconductors to Putin himself. Putin called it an “economic blitzkrieg.”

Within a week of the invasion, the U.S. and its allies blocked Russia’s central bank from accessing $300 billion it had stashed around the world and froze the foreign bank accounts of dozens of Russian billionaires.

G7 nations also wanted to limit what Russia could earn from its oil supply without taking that oil out of the market, worried a shortage would cause a global price spike. Instead, they imposed a $60-a-barrel price cap on all Russian crude oil.

How Russia works around the price cap 

Russia is the third largest oil producer in the world and this year, despite the price cap, its oil and gas revenues are expected to increase 2.6% to nearly $240 billion. The Kremlin has circumvented the price cap using the dark fleet.

The dark fleet, or shadow fleet, is used to move a million barrels of oil around Western sanctions every day. The term shadow or dark fleet refers to aging vessels with opaque ownership that moves oil to evade sanctions.

The Sprite
The Sprite

60 Minutes


One of the vessels, the 21-year-old Sprite, was purchased in February. It’s registered to a shell company in the Caribbean. While off the coast of Greece, oil was transferred onto and off of the Sprite.

The transfers act as an additional layer of obfuscation, according to Samir Madani, who runs a company from Stockholm that tracks oil tankers for international clients. He said the dark fleet is made up of an estimated 200 ships.

Most of the oil leaving Russia nowadays goes to China or India, Madani said. A 60 Minutes analysis of four years of data from India’s Ministry of Commerce found that the value of India’s imports of Russian crude oil increased by more than 2,000% since the invasion of Ukraine.

Much of that crude oil goes to an Indian port called Sikka, where it’s refined into other oil products, such as gasoline. Those products don’t necessarily stay in India. Madani helped track a tanker of refined products from Sikka, India’s port, as it went around the tip of Africa, and across the Atlantic Ocean before ending up in New York. It happens around twice a month, Madani said.

“After it becomes refined, it’s untraceable,” Madani said.

Russia’s workaround is paying off. Almost all of its crude oil is selling above the price cap. 

Stopping the dark fleet requires identifying the vessels and making it known that they’re subject to sanctions, Singh said. 

“What we’re trying to balance right now is to continue to move the global oil market into balance, to continue to have a downward movement in the level of inflation across the world, and to sustain unity,” Singh said. “This is about…stamina more so than it is about shock and awe.”

Russia’s uranium business

It’s not just India that’s fueling Russia’s economy – the U.S. is playing a role, too. Most enriched uranium purchased by the U.S. is now of foreign origin, with around a quarter of the enriched uranium entering the U.S. coming from Russia, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. 

In 1993, Russia and the U.S. signed a 20-year agreement, dubbed Megatons to Megawatts, under which the U.S. agreed to purchase enriched uranium from Russia after it stopped making its own enriched uranium — a critical fuel for nuclear-power plants — around a decade ago. 

The U.S. is paying Russia around $1 billion a year for enriched uranium to help run 94 nuclear reactors that provide about 20% of America’s energy needs. Congress in May banned the import of Russian enriched uranium, but there’s a waiver process in place until 2028. 

Last year, the energy company Centrus started enriching uranium inside a Piketon, Ohio, facility. It’s the only American company with that capability. 

Using 40-foot tall centrifuges, Centrus spins uranium gas until it’s enriched and can be used as nuclear fuel. But its 16 centrifuges can only make a fraction of the enriched uranium the U.S. needs. Centrus wants to build 11,000 more centrifuges. CEO Amir Vexler estimates that, under a best case scenario, it would take six to seven years to get to full capacity and to end U.S. reliance on Russia.

Companies in Russia pivot 

Companies in Russia pivoted quickly when the war started. After a number of Western companies pulled out of Russia or suspended operations there, Russian versions quickly replaced them. Instead of Starbucks, there’s now Stars Coffee; instead of Zara, there’s Maag, and instead of Coca Cola, there’s Dobry Cola. 

Evading sanctions has become a business sector of its own in Russia, Richard Connolly, an associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London and a specialist on the Russian economy, said. 

“The number of small- and medium-sized businesses registered in Russia is at an all-time high,” Connolly said. 

Richard Connolly
Richard Connolly

60 Minutes


Banned Western goods still make their way into Russia, too. Most goods Russians would have had access to before the war are still available now, Connolly said. 

While sanctions prohibit the sale of cars like Mercedes or Chryslers to Russia, they’re still making their way into Russia through third parties, such as Georgia, Kazakhstan and China, Connolly said. Prices are higher because of the roundabout import route, but there are wealthy Russians willing to pay. 

“There’s an incentive for lots of Russian small businesses to acquire goods on foreign markets from sanctioning countries, bring them back to Russia, and sell them at a very healthy markup,” Connolly said. 

Before the war, Russia wasn’t investing enough, Connolly said. Since the war began and sanctions were put into place, the economic trajectory has changed. It’s the fastest Russia’s economy has grown for a consecutive period in over a decade, Connolly said. 

“Whether they can sustain that over time is, of course, the big question,” Connolly said.



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10/27: CBS Weekend News – CBS News

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Harris campaigns in Philadelphia as Trump rallies in New York City; Students and parents swap the bus for biking to school together

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Puerto Rico comments from speaker at Trump rally draw criticism while Harris’ plan for the island gets Bad Bunny endorsement

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With nine days until Election Day, Puerto Rico has been thrust into the spotlight by both campaigns. Vice President Kamala Harris unveiled a plan to assist the island — leading to an endorsement from Bad Bunny — while Puerto Rico was referred to as “a floating island of garbage” by comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who spoke at a rally for former President Donald Trump in New York City. 

In an effort to court Puerto Rican voters in the U.S. mainland, Harris on Sunday posted a video on her social media platforms pledging to create a Puerto Rican task force to create jobs, cut red tape to ensure disaster recovery funds are used quickly and efficiently and work with leaders across the island to ensure Puerto Ricans have access to reliable and affordable electricity. 

Rapper and singer Bad Bunny, a global superstar from Puerto Rico, shared the vice president’s video on his Instagram account with his 45 million followers and later posted a clipped portion of the video in which Harris slammed Trump for his response to Hurricane Maria, which devastated the island in 2017. 

“I will never forget what Donald Trump did and what he did not do when Puerto Rico needed a caring and a competent leader,” Harris said in the video. “He abandoned the island, tried to block aid after back-to-back devastating hurricanes, and offered nothing more than paper towels and insults.”

In 2017, Trump visited the island to survey damage after Hurricane Maria struck as a major Category 4 storm. While visiting with survivors, the former president at one point threw paper towels into the crowd when distributing supplies, a move that was criticized as callous amid widespread frustration over the federal response to the hurricane that left much of the island without power and food. 

A source close to Bad Bunny confirmed to CBS News that the Instagram post represents an endorsement of the vice president, breaking from Bad Bunny’s longstanding tradition to not weigh in on national politics. It’s a coveted endorsement with weight that both political parties have long hoped to achieve to strengthen inroads with Latino voters, given Bad Bunny’s global popularity. 

Moments before Bad Bunny’s endorsement, comedian Tony Hinchcliffe targeted Puerto Rico during a set of disparaging jokes while speaking at a Trump rally in Madison Square Garden. 

“I don’t know if you guys know this, but there’s literally a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now,” Hinchcliffe said. “I think it’s called Puerto Rico.”

Trump senior advisor Danielle Alvarez told CBS News, “this joke does not reflect the views of President Trump or the campaign” adding that the jokes were not reviewed or pre-approved. 

Hinchcliffe’s remarks, which also included offensive jokes about Black people and Latinos, were met with swift backlash, with several celebrities coming out in defense of Puerto Rico, Latinos in the U.S. and voicing their support for Harris’ plan for the island. Among those who weighed in were Jennifer Lopez, Ariana DeBose and Ricky Martin. Martin, with over 18  million followers, took to Instagram and posted, “Puerto Rico, this is what they think of us, vote for Kamala Harris.”

Several Democratic and Republican politicians were also among those to denounce Hinchcliffe’s swing at Puerto Ricans, who make up a crucial voting group.

Harris’ running mate Gov. Tim Walz said during a livestream with Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, “There are hundreds of thousands of Puerto Ricans across battleground states. They need to vote.”

Ocasio-Cortez agreed with Walz and directed her comments toward Puerto Ricans in the crucial battleground state of Pennsylvania. “If you’re in Reading, if you’re in Philly, look at that trash,” Ocasio-Cortez said, referring to Hinchcliffe’s joke. “What is trash is people actually just thinking of other human beings that way.”

Pennsylvania is home to over 579,000 eligible Latino voters with roughly 50% residing within the “222 Corridor” — a stretch of small cities west and north of Philadelphia including Reading, Allentown and Bethlehem. 

With Trump winning the Keystone State in 2016 by 44,000 votes and Biden taking it by 81,000 in 2020, slim margins are again expected to determine the outcome of the presidential election.

Harris on Sunday spoke directly to Latino voters while visiting a local Puerto Rican restaurant in Philadelphia. “When I was in the Senate, knowing Puerto Rico doesn’t have a senator, I always felt a need and an obligation to do what I could as a senator to make sure that Puerto Rico’s needs were met,” Harris said. 

Harris campaign spokesperson Kevin Muñoz said Sunday in a statement, “A reminder: Pennsylvania is home to more than 1 million Latinos who are primarily of Puerto Rican backgrounds, and today, Vice President Harris campaigned in the heart of Philadelphia’s Puerto Rican community talking not just about her vision for the island, but how she will lower costs and create opportunity in their communities on the mainland.”

On Tuesday, Trump is expected to campaign in Allentown, Pennsylvania, where Latinos make up 54% of the population, the majority being of Puerto Rican descent.

Republican Florida Senator Rick Scott, an ally of Trump’s, also denounced Hinchcliffe’s comments.

“This joke bombed for a reason. It’s not funny and it’s not true,” Scott said. “Puerto Ricans are amazing people and amazing Americans! I’ve been to the island many times. It’s a beautiful place. Everyone should visit! I will always do whatever I can to help any Puerto Rican in Florida or on the island.”

Republican Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar called the comments “racist.”

The island’s Resident Commissioner Jenniffer González-Colón, a Republican running for governor of the island, said the comments were “despicable, inappropriate and disgusting.”

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10/27/2024: Deportation; Sanctions; Surfmen – CBS News

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First, a report on what Trump’s mass deportation plan might look like if he wins the election. Then, a look at how Russia’s dark fleet evades sanctions. And, meet the U.S. Coast Guard’s elite surfmen.

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