US House passes resolution calling for sanctions against Russia

Calls for removal of all Russian military forces from Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula other than those operating in accordance with its 1997 agreement regarding its Black Sea Fleet stationed there.

March 12, 2014 09:48 am | Updated December 03, 2021 08:09 am IST - Washington:

In this file photo, a woman passes by a WWII memorial, the actual Russian tank that was first to enter Simferopol in 1944 as the Red Army was advancing. The Parliament in pro-Russian Crimea declared independence from Ukraine as a first step towards joining Russia. The US House of Representatives retaliated by passing a resolution condemning Russia’s violation of Ukrainian sovereignty and calling for Russian sanctions. Photo: AP

In this file photo, a woman passes by a WWII memorial, the actual Russian tank that was first to enter Simferopol in 1944 as the Red Army was advancing. The Parliament in pro-Russian Crimea declared independence from Ukraine as a first step towards joining Russia. The US House of Representatives retaliated by passing a resolution condemning Russia’s violation of Ukrainian sovereignty and calling for Russian sanctions. Photo: AP

The US House of Representatives on Tuesday passed a resolution condemning Russia’s violation of Ukrainian sovereignty and calling for Russian sanctions.

“This resolution is an important part of a larger effort to aid Ukraine and impose real costs on Russia,” said Representative Ed Royce, a Republican from California and chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, which unanimously passed the resolution last week.

Mr. Royce called the resolution, which now goes to the Senate, “a very important declaration of support for the people of Ukraine during this crisis.” It condemns “in clear and unmistakable terms” Russia’s aggression.

The resolution affirms that the US has a strong interest in a democratic and prosperous Ukraine with its territorial integrity intact and calls for a number of actions, including:

— Removal of all Russian military forces from Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula other than those operating in accordance with its 1997 agreement regarding its Black Sea Fleet stationed there.

— Deployment of independent monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in Crimea and other areas of Ukraine.

— Suspension by NATO allies and European Union member states of military cooperation with Russia, including sales of military equipment

— Boycott of the G8 summit in Sochi, Russia, by the US, Canada, Germany, Italy, France, Britain and Japan.

The Kremlin warned last week that any sanctions imposed by the United States on Russia over the turmoil in Ukraine could “boomerang” on Washington.

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