In Shorts:
- China’s Foreign Ministry has publicly declared that new U.S. sanctions on Russian oil and gas companies violate international law.
- The criticism extends to the European Union for its 13th sanctions package, which targeted several Chinese firms for alleged links to Russia.
- Beijing has vowed to take “necessary measures” to protect the rights of Chinese companies from what it calls “unwarranted suppression.”
The geopolitical fallout from the war in Ukraine took a significant new turn this week, as the People’s Republic of China issued a stern rebuke to Western nations over their latest round of economic sanctions. In a move that underscores the deepening divide between global powers, Beijing has labeled recent punitive measures by the United States and European Union as illegitimate and without legal foundation.
The controversy stems from a fresh wave of sanctions unveiled by the U.S. Treasury Department, primarily aimed at crippling the operational capabilities of Russia’s state-owned shipping giant, Sovcomflot. Additionally, the U.S. imposed sanctions on several vessels linked to the Russian oil trade. Almost in lockstep, the European Union rolled out its 13th package of measures against Russia, which for the first time explicitly targeted companies in mainland China for allegedly assisting Moscow in circumventing existing restrictions.
In a strongly-worded statement, a spokesperson for China’s Foreign Ministry did not mince words. “The U.S. sanctions on Russian oil and gas companies have no basis in international law,” the official declared, framing the actions as a unilateral overreach. The statement emphasized China’s firm opposition to what it perceives as “long-arm jurisdiction” that lacks the authority of the United Nations Security Council.
The criticism was not reserved for Washington alone. Beijing also took direct aim at the European Union for its decision to include Chinese entities on its sanctions list. The Foreign Ministry asserted that China would “resolutely take necessary measures to firmly safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies,” pushing back against what it described as unwarranted suppression and a violation of the principles of fair competition.
This public denouncement marks a significant hardening of China’s position and highlights the challenges the West faces in enforcing a global sanctions regime without Beijing’s cooperation. As the economic war continues to expand, the standoff signals a new phase where the battle lines are not only drawn in Ukraine but in the ministerial chambers and financial markets of the world’s largest economies.




































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