USA

The US imposed new sanctions on companies from Russia, China and the UAE

The United States Department of Commerce has imposed export restrictions on three companies from Russia, six from China, and two from the United Arab Emirates. On April 11, the Department’s website published the list of the newly sanctioned companies.

The companies have been penalized, among other reasons, for their involvement in the purchase of Shahed war drone components, used by Russia in the war against Ukraine and by the Iranian-backed Yemeni Houthis in attacks on ships in the Red Sea.

“The ERC determined to add Jiangxi Xintuo Enterprise Co. Ltd., under the destination of China, to the Entity List for supporting Russia’s military through the procurement, development, and proliferation of Russian unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). This activity is contrary to the national security and foreign policy interests of the United States under § 744.11”, the Commerce Department’s resolution states.

Thus, Russian companies were blacklisted for “creating a network for the procurement of aerospace components,” including those used to manufacture drones: “Aerosila, which produces aircraft propellers; Delta-Aero, which repairs and maintains aircraft; and UDK-Star, a part of Rostec, which produces fuel supply and control systems for gas turbine engines.

According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, the Chinese company Shenzhen Jiasibo Technology participated in the purchase of components for Shahed attack drones, which was also subject to restrictions.

The US authorities imposed sanctions on several Chinese companies that they claim are involved in supplying artificial intelligence chips for China’s military modernization programs. In response, Beijing has promised to take “necessary measures” to protect the interests of Chinese companies, the Global Times reports, citing Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning.

The Ministry of Commerce’s decision noted that restrictions penalized two UAE companies for exporting goods from the United States to Iran, circumventing US sanctions imposed on Tehran.

On February 23, the US Treasury Department announced a package of sanctions against 500 companies associated with the Russian Federation to mark the second anniversary of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Mike

Media analyst and journalist. Fully committed to insightful, analytical, investigative journalism and debunking disinformation. My goal is to produce analytical articles on Ukraine, and Europe, based on trustworthy sources.

Recent Posts

Russia Cognitive Warfare in 2026: How Disinformation Became an Architecture of Influence

Recent reporting and analysis on Russian influence operations targeting the EU and Ukraine suggest a…

1 week ago

Russia’s FSB Accused of Using Fake Volyn Tragedy Documents to Strain Ukraine-Poland Relations

Ukraine’s Center for Countering Disinformation says Russia is using fabricated archival material and state media…

1 week ago

Re:Baltica: Kremlin-linked disinformation campaign escalated threats against the Baltics over drone claims

A Re:Baltica investigation says pro-Kremlin media and social media channels used unrelated security incidents in…

1 week ago

MV-lehti: How Finland’s Largest Pro-Kremlin Outlet Spreads Russian War Narratives

With nearly 900,000 monthly visitors, MV-lehti is the most-visited pro-Kremlin outlet in Finland — and…

3 weeks ago

Alexandra Jost Sanctions: How the EU Case Shows the Rise of Influencer-Led Kremlin Messaging

The EU’s designation of Alexandra Jost marks a wider shift in how European authorities are…

3 weeks ago

Geoestrategia.eu: How a Spanish Outlet Bypassed EU Sanctions to Keep Amplifying Russian Propaganda

A Spanish-language website with declared partnerships with RT and Sputnik has published more than 2,300…

3 weeks ago