A dictator brutalizes his people. A country attacks its neighbor. A regime pursues nuclear weapons. These are common crises that threaten peace, stability, and national interests. How to confront them has long vexed policymakers, especially for the US and its western allies, which peg their global credibility on safeguarding rules-based relations and free trade.
The options available to them are often more bad than good. A strongly worded condemnation may be worth little more than the paper — or tweet — it’s written on. At the other extreme, armed intervention risks blood and treasure without certainty of success.
For lack of a better option, Western countries then see only one option: sanctions.
“They are the alternative between words and war,” John Smith, a former top United States sanctions official, told DW. “Every president, Democrat or Republican, and every Congress, Democrat- or Republican-led, loves the sanctions tool.”
Ex-President Donald Trump imposed hundreds of sanctions — most notably on Iran, scuppering the nuclear deal
Then came Donald Trump, and sanctions “shot through the roof,” Smith said. There were more than 500 sanctions designations when Smith became Director of the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), which oversees most US sanctions, in 2015. By the time he left three years later, that figure had nearly tripled, according to data compiled by the Center for a New American Security.
Sanctions: Eye of the beholder
Trump’s sanction frenzy underscored a long-standing weakness in using them. If ill-defined and poorly constructed, they can have little or adverse effect. Trump’s unilateral “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran undermined the multilateral nuclear deal from 2015, which put Iran’s nuclear program on the table for the first time. In unleashing sanctions without a clear objective, Iran had little incentive to cooperate.
“The criticism of the Trump administration was that sanctions were often used in a knee-jerk fashion without the orderly considered process of determining what would actually be a deterrent,” Smith said.
As the tip of the US sanctions spear, OFAC plays a leading role in that process, doing for sanctions what the military does for conflict: Advise the president on what targets make sense to hit and what the fallout could be, and then carrying out the president’s decision.
Sanctions cover a large space of foreign relations. They can target individuals, economic sectors or, in their most blunt form, an entire country or area.
Cuba has been crippled by decades of sweeping US sanctions, and Fidel Castro used this for propaganda purposes
Sanctions are not just economic, although the asset freezes and commercial penalties overseen by OFAC are among the most common. There are also diplomatic sanctions, such as travel bans; political ones like boycotts and divestment; and those that prohibit arms sales or restrict access to certain technology. Tariffs, too, came to be seen as a type of sanction, as Trump turned to them when looking to punish China and the European Union in trade disputes.
The shape-shifting nature of sanctions is one reason evaluating them can be so difficult. Like war, sanctions can cause unintended consequences, collateral damage, and the target may react unpredictably or prove to be more resilient than anticipated.
“It’s a complicated exercise to elicit change and to exert influence in the desired direction,” Sascha Lohmann, a researcher at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP), told DW. “This usually gets forgotten, that this kind of social engineering is really difficult.”
Today’s failure is tomorrow’s success
Cuba, for example, has been crippled by decades of sweeping US sanctions, but Fidel Castro went to the grave with his communist revolution intact. His success was thanks not only to Soviet and Chinese patronage but also to his ability to suppress dissent while rallying the public around the idea of Davidian Cuba defying the American Goliath.
The uncertainty makes sanctions “more like an art than a science,” Lohmann said, as policymakers try to determine what kind of pain to inflict on a country, and how much, for it to buckle. If they get it wrong, they can hurt broad sections of society and strengthen the intended target — the economic equivalent of killing civilians while bombing terrorist leaders.
“You could flush the Russian economy down the drain in two or three months with certain sanctions, but that’s like saying the surgery was successful but the patient is dead,” Lohmann said.
Russia has seen German and EU sanctions as a weak tool
That does not mean sanctions never work, and success is itself relative. Sanctions alone are unlikely to reverse Russia’s annexation of Crimea and its aggression in eastern Ukraine, nor get Alexander Lukashenko to release his grip of Belarus, nor end China’s repression of its Uyghur Muslim minority. Yet they can be the line in the sand that prevents bad actors from going even further — or others from following their example.
“It always depends what you mean by ‘work,'” Lohmann said. “Signaling disapproval, this is really effective.”
EU sanctions, Lohmann added, are often more about promoting unity among the bloc’s bickering 27 member states than changing the target’s behavior. From that perspective, sanctions can be considered a success. Democratic governments have additional electoral pressures „to act, or there’s pressure to appear as if you’re acting,” he said.
American sanctions against Nord Stream 2 could also be seen as a success — not for stopping the project, as President Joe Biden acknowledged when he recently decided against applying additional ones, which could have harmed allies. But they made the pipeline a political issue in Germany in an election year. German critics of the pipeline now include members of both Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative party and her government, who fear the risks of damaging relations with the US outweigh the benefits of more Russian gas.
The issue shows how sanctions, or the threat of them, can influence the behavior of both allies and adversaries. Smith, who now advises clients on these issues for the law firm, Morrison Foerster, is convinced western sanctions against Russia halted its push into Ukraine and saved lives, even if the conflict continues.
“It’s hard for me to label a successful sanctions program versus a failure because sanctions are a patient person’s tool,” he said. “You’re trying to keep someone in check.”
Lubmin in Germany’s far north-east will be the final point of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline
A better sanction
The problem with sanctions, therefore, is not so much the sanction itself, but how the tool is perceived and used. United Nations sanctions, or ones coordinated with other countries, can be the hardest to get support for, but are often the most successful.
“Sanctions are best when they’re multilateral,” Smith said. Otherwise, it can be relatively easy for the target to evade them, especially if the two sides have few commercial or political ties for sanctions to hit.
That was Trump critics’ chief complaint — all stick, no carrot, and little coordination. For sanctions to work, they need to be part of a larger strategy that includes incentives, such as diplomatic support or financial aid, says Smith. If behavioral change is the goal, sanctioned countries need to see the path that gets them there.
“The people who think that sanctions are the panacea to all of the world’s problems are really going to be misguided or disappointed,” Smith said. Sanctions are supposed to be one tool.”
In other words, a sledgehammer can knock down a wall, but it is probably a bad choice for hanging a picture.
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Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/sanctions-what-are-they-good-for/a-57780906?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf