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Reconsidering US Sanctions Policy Amid the Coronavirus Crisis and the Oil Market Crash

Reconsidering US Sanctions Policy Amid the Coronavirus Crisis and the Oil Market Crash

Full Title: Reconsidering US Sanctions Policy Amid the Coronavirus Crisis and the Oil Market Crash
Author(s): Richard Nephew
Publisher(s): Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy
Publication Date: March 31, 2020
Full Text: Download Resource
Description (excerpt):

For energy markets, the profound economic disruptions caused by the coronavirus have broken the arrangements of the OPEC+ oil exporters to limit production, as Russia and Saudi Arabia failed to agree on production caps. Oil prices plunged as producers ramped up output, made worse by the demand shock created by the spread of Covid-19 and resulting plunging global economic activity as countries have sought to cope with the widespread infection and mortality.

The global economic shocks and humanitarian crises have left US sanctions policy in a deeply uncomfortable spot. The United States has prioritized using sanctions as a means of creating leverage for resolving myriad foreign policy crises, arguing in part that using sanctions is a more humane option than the alternatives. The United States has long argued that without sanctions, some problems would either get far worse, with their own unpleasant consequences (such as human rights violations, regional aggression, and acts of terrorism), or would be met by US military force instead. Though some would disagree with the notion that sanctions are ever moral or just, it is on this basis—taken in combination with the presence of humanitarian exceptions to sanctions—that US policymakers across the political spectrum have asserted that their approach is appropriate and consistent with humanitarian values.

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