"Western technology goods are winding up in Russian missiles,
raising questions about the efficacy of sanctions.
Late last month, American and European Union officials
traded information on millions of dollars worth of banned technology that was
slipping through the cracks of their defenses and into Russian territory.
Senior tax and trade officials noted a surge in chips and
other electronic components being sold to Russia through Armenia, Kazakhstan
and other countries, according to slides from the March 24 meeting obtained by
The New York Times. And they shared information on the flow of eight
particularly sensitive categories of chips and other electronic devices that
they have deemed as critical to the development of weapons, including Russian
cruise missiles that have been used to strike Ukraine.
As Ukraine tries to repel Russia from its territory, the
United States and its allies have been fighting a parallel battle to keep the
chips needed for weapons systems, drones and tanks out of Russian hands.
But denying Russia access to chips has been a challenge, and
the United States and Europe have not made a clear victory. While Russia’s
ability to manufacture weaponry has been diminished because of Western
sanctions adopted more than a year ago, the country is still finding a
circuitous route to access many electronic components.
The result is devastating: As the United States and the
European Union rally to furnish Ukrainians with weapons to keep fighting
against Russia, their own technology is being used by Russia to fight back.
American officials argue that the sweeping sanctions they
have imposed in partnership with 38 other governments have severely damaged
Russia’s military capacity, and raised the cost to Russia to procure the parts
it needs.
“My view is that we’ve been very effective in impeding
Russia’s ability to sustain and reconstitute a military force,” Alan Estevez,
who oversees U.S. export controls at the Bureau of Industry and Security at the
Commerce Department, said in an interview in March.
“We recognize that this is hard, hard work,” Mr. Estevez
added. “They’re adapting. We’re adapting to their adaptations.”
There is no doubt that the trade restrictions are making it
significantly harder for Russia to obtain technology that can be used on the
battlefield, much of which is designed by firms in the United States and allied
countries.
Direct sales of chips to Russia from the United States and
its allies have plummeted to zero. U.S. officials say Russia has already blown
through much of its supply of its most accurate weapons and has been forced to
substitute lower-quality or counterfeit parts that make its weaponry less
accurate.
But trade data shows that other countries have stepped in to
provide Russia with some of what it needs. After dropping off sharply
immediately following the Ukrainian conflict, Russia’s chip imports crept back
up, particularly from China and Hong Kong. Imports between October and January
were 50 percent or more of median prewar levels each month, according to
tracking by Silverado Policy Accelerator, a think tank.
Sarah V. Stewart, Silverado’s chief executive, said the
export controls imposed on Russia had disrupted pre-existing supply chains, and
that was “a really positive thing.” But she said that Russia was “still
continuing to get quite a substantial amount” of chips.
“It’s really a supply chain network that is very, very large
and very complex and not necessarily transparent,” Ms. Stewart said.
“Chips are truly ubiquitous.”
As Russia has tried to get around restrictions, U.S.
officials have steadily ratcheted up their rules, including sanctioning dozens
of companies and organizations in Russia, Iran, China, Canada and elsewhere.
The United States has also expanded its trade restrictions to include toasters,
hair dryers and microwaves, all of which contain chips, and set up a
“disruptive technology strike force” to investigate and prosecute illicit
actors trying to acquire sensitive technology.
But cracking down on illicit trade in chips is proving hard
to police given the ubiquity of semiconductors. Companies shipped 1.15 trillion
chips to customers globally in 2021, adding to a huge worldwide stockpile.
China, which is not part of the sanctions regime, is pumping out increasingly
sophisticated chips.
The Semiconductor Industry Association, which represents
major chip companies, said that it is engaging with the U.S. government and
other parties to combat the illicit trade in semiconductors, but that
controlling their flow is extremely difficult.
“We have rigorous protocols to remove bad actors from our
supply chains, but with about one trillion chips sold globally each year, it’s
not as simple as flipping a switch,” the association said in a statement.
So far, the Russian military appears to have been relying on
a large stockpile of electronics and weaponry it accumulated before the
conflict. But that supply may be drying up, making it more urgent for Russia to
obtain new shipments.
A report issued Tuesday by Conflict Armament Research, an
independent group that examines Russian weaponry recovered from the
battlefield, revealed the first known example of Russia making weapons with
chips manufactured after the conflict began.
Three identical chips, made by a U.S. company in an offshore
factory, were found in Lancet drones recovered from several sites in Ukraine
this past February and March, according to Damien Spleeters, who led the
investigation for C.A.R.
Mr. Spleeters said his group was not revealing the chip’s
manufacturer while it worked with the company to trace how the product ended up
in Russia.
These chips were not necessarily an example of an export
control violation, Mr. Spleeters said, since the United States did not issue
restrictions on this specific type of chip until September. The chips were
manufactured in August and may have been shipped out soon thereafter, he said.
But he saw their presence as evidence that Russia’s big
prewar stockpile of electronics was finally running out.
“Now we are going to start seeing whether controls and
sanctions will be effective,” Mr. Spleeters said.
The parent company of the firm that designed the drone, the
Kalashnikov Group, a major Russian weapons manufacturer, has publicly
challenged the West’s technology restrictions.
“It is impossible to isolate Russia from the entire global
electronic component base,” Alan Lushnikov, the group’s president, said in a
Russian language interview last year, according to a translation in a report
from the Center for Strategic and International Relations, a think tank. “It’s
a fantasy to think otherwise.”
That quote included “some bluster,” Gregory Allen, one of
the report’s authors, said at an event in December. But, he added, “Russia is
going to try and do whatever it takes to get around these export controls.
Because for them, the stakes are incredibly, incredibly high.”
As the documents from the March meeting show, U.S. and
European officials have become increasingly concerned that Russia is obtaining
American and European goods by rerouting them through Armenia, Kazakhstan and
other Central Asian countries.
One document marked with the seal of the U.S. Bureau of
Industry and Security said that in 2022, Armenia imported 515 percent more
chips and processors from the United States and 212 percent more from the
European Union than in 2021. Armenia then exported 97 percent of those same
products to Russia, the document said.
In another document, the Bureau of Industry and Security
identified eight categories of chips and components deemed critical to Russian
weapons development, including one called a field programmable gate array,
which had been found in one model of Russian cruise missile, the KH-101.
The intelligence sharing between the United States and
Europe is part of a nascent but intensifying effort to minimize the leakage of
such items to Russia. While the United States has deeper experience with
enforcing sanctions, the European Union lacks centralized intelligence, customs
and law enforcement capabilities.
The U.S. and the E.U. have both recently dispatched
officials to countries that were shipping more to Russia, to try to cut down
that trade. Mr. Estevez said that a recent visit to Turkey had convinced that
government to halt transshipments to Russia through their free trade zone, as
well the servicing of Russian and Belarusian airplanes in Turkish airports.
Biden administration officials say that shipments to Russia
and Belarus of the electronic equipment they have targeted fell 41 percent
between 2021 and 2022, as the United States and its allies expanded their
restrictions globally.
Matthew S. Axelrod, the assistant secretary for export
enforcement at the Bureau of Industry and Security, said that the picture was
one of a “broad decrease.”
“But still there are certain areas of the world that are
being used to to get these items to Russia,” he said. “That’s a problem that we
are laser focused on.”
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