"Russian companies have many
cryptocurrency tools at their disposal to evade sanctions, including a
so-called digital ruble.
When the United States barred
Americans from doing business with Russian banks, oil and gas developers and
other companies in 2014, after the country’s invasion of Crimea, the hit to
Russia’s economy was swift and immense. Economists estimated that sanctions
imposed by Western nations cost Russia $50 billion a year.
Since then, the global market for cryptocurrencies and other
digital assets has ballooned. That’s bad news for enforcers of sanctions, and
good news for Russia.
On Tuesday, the Biden administration enacted fresh sanctions on Russia
over the conflict in Ukraine, aiming to thwart its access to foreign capital.
But Russian entities are preparing to blunt some of the worst effects by making
deals with anyone around the world willing to work with them, experts said.
And, they say, those entities can then use digital currencies to bypass the
control points that governments rely on — mainly transfers of money by banks —
to block deal execution.
“Russia has had a lot of time to
think about this specific consequence,” said Michael Parker, a former federal
prosecutor who now heads the anti-money laundering and sanctions practice at
the Washington law firm Ferrari & Associates. “It would be naïve to think
that they haven’t gamed out exactly this scenario.”
Sanctions are some of the most
powerful tools the United States and European countries have to influence the
behavior of nations they don’t consider allies. The United States in particular
is able to use sanctions as a diplomatic tool because the dollar is the world’s
reserve currency and used in payments worldwide. But American government
officials are increasingly aware of the potential for cryptocurrencies to
lessen the impact of sanctions and are stepping up their scrutiny of digital
assets.
To apply sanctions, a government makes a list of people and
businesses its citizens must avoid. Anyone caught engaging with a member of the
list faces heavy fines. But the real key to any effective sanctions program is
the global financial system. Banks around the world play a major role in
enforcement: They see where money comes from and where it’s bound, and
anti-money laundering laws require them to block transactions with sanctioned
entities and report what they see to authorities. But if banks are the eyes and
ears of governments in this space, the explosion of digital currencies is
blinding them.
Banks have to abide by “know your customer” rules, which
include verifying their clients’ identities. But exchanges and other platforms
that facilitate the buying and selling of cryptocurrencies and digital assets
are rarely as good at tracking their customers as banks are, even though they
are supposed to follow the same rules. In October, the U.S. Treasury Department
warned that cryptocurrencies posed an increasingly serious threat to the
American sanctions program and that U.S. authorities needed to educate
themselves about the technology.
Should it choose to evade sanctions, Russia has multiple
cryptocurrency-related tools at its disposal, experts said. All it needs is to
find ways to trade without touching the dollar.
The Russian government is developing its own central bank
digital currency, a so-called digital ruble that it hopes to use to
trade directly with other countries willing to accept it without first
converting it into dollars.
Hacking techniques like ransomware
could help Russian actors steal digital currencies and make up revenue lost to
sanctions.
And while cryptocurrency transactions are recorded on the
underlying blockchain, making them transparent, new tools developed in Russia
can help mask the origin of such transactions. That would allow businesses to
trade with Russian entities without detection.
There is a precedent for these kinds
of workarounds. Iran and North Korea are among countries that have used digital
currencies to mitigate the effects of Western sanctions, a trend that U.S. and
United Nations officials have recently observed. North Korea, for instance, has
used ransomware to steal cryptocurrency to fund its nuclear program, according
to a U.N. report.
In October 2020, representatives of Russia’s central bank told a Moscow newspaper that
the new “digital ruble” would make the country less dependent on the United
States and better able to resist sanctions. It would let Russian entities
conduct transactions outside the international banking system with any country
willing to trade in digital currency.
Russia could find willing partners in other nations targeted
by U.S. sanctions, including Iran,
that are also developing government-backed digital currencies. China, Russia’s
largest trading partner in both imports and exports according to the World
Bank, has already launched its own central bank digital currency. The country’s
leader, Xi Jinping, recently described China’s relationship with Russia as
having “no limits.”
The developing system of central banks directly exchanging
digital currencies creates new risks, said Yaya Fanusie, a fellow at the Center
for a New American Security who has studied the effects of cryptocurrency on
sanctions. “The lessening of U.S. sanctions power comes from a system where
these nation states are able to do transactions without going through the
global banking system.”
In early February, independent sanctions monitors told the
United Nations Security Council that North Korea was using cryptocurrencies
to fund its nuclear and ballistic missile program, according to Reuters. (A
spokesman for Norway’s permanent mission to the U.N. confirmed the existence of
the report, which has not yet been made public.) Last May, the consulting firm
Elliptic described how Iran was using revenue from Bitcoin mining to
make up for the limitations on its ability to sell oil because of sanctions.
Sanctioned Russian entities could
deploy their own evasion strategy, using ransomware attacks. The playbook is
straightforward: A hacker breaks into computer networks and locks up digital
information until the victim pays for its release, usually in cryptocurrency.
Illegal funds have also flowed into Russia through a dark
web marketplace called Hydra, which is powered by cryptocurrency and handled
more than $1 billion in sales in 2020, according to Chainalysis. The platform’s
strict rules — sellers are allowed to liquidate cryptocurrency only through
certain regional exchanges — have made it difficult for researchers to follow
the money.
“We know that there’s no questions asked, and we know that
Hydra operates not just throughout Eastern Europe but throughout western
Europe,” said Kim Grauer, director of research at Chainalysis. “There’s
definitely cross-border business happening.”
Digital currencies all use blockchain technology, a form of
computer code that is publicly viewable by anyone, anywhere. This public ledger
keeps track of the movements of individual digital coins from one “wallet” — as
online repositories for digital assets are called — to another. In theory, this
should let authorities track all crypto transactions and keep sanctioned
entities from completing them.
But the technology behind Hydra masks the source of
transactions, offering a potential tool for Russian users to move money outside
the country’s borders. On its own, Hydra is not yet big enough to handle the
volume of transactions that Russia would need to successfully evade sanctions.
But other money-laundering techniques — including “nesting,” in which an
illicit marketplace buries itself within a larger, legitimate structure to hide
its activities — could also help.
There are signs that the United
States is stepping up its monitoring of cryptocurrency activity. On Feb. 17,
the Justice Department announced it had created a new national cryptocurrency
enforcement team, a move that seemed to emphasize that federal prosecutors were
paying extra attention to bad behavior among cryptocurrency users.
Mr. Parker, the former prosecutor,
said that the Feb. 8 arrests of a Manhattan couple for stealing $3.6 billion in Bitcoin
from the Hong Kong cryptocurrency exchange Bitfinex is “a tangible example of
the government getting very good and up to speed on what they need to do to be
able to trace this.”
Administration officials are also
urging the cryptocurrency industry to implement internal controls that prevent
bad actors from using their services. In October, the Treasury Department
published a 30-page sanctions-compliance manual
recommending that cryptocurrency companies use geolocation tools to weed out
customers in sanctioned jurisdictions. In many cases, the report said, crypto
companies have taken months or years to implement such compliance procedures.
That may change as the industry
starts to mature. Chainalysis offers a “know your transaction” tool that alerts
companies when blacklisted entities use their services. Last year, the company
doubled its number of private-sector customers, many of whom use the compliance
tool.
But savvy cryptocurrency users can
find ways around a blacklist.
“A Treasury designation of a crypto wallet address is not
foolproof,” said Mr. Fanusie of the Center for a New American Security. “That
designated actor can still open up a new wallet elsewhere. You can do that
quite easily.”
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