Although the West has not sent troops to the battlefront, it has entered the war using extensive economic artillery against the government of Vladimir Putin.
The European Union, the United States, the United The United Kingdom and its allies this week banned transactions in US dollars with the Central Bank of Russia in retaliation for the invasion of Ukraine.
Other sanctions were added to the measure, such as the exclusion of some Russian banks from the SWIFT international payment system, which allows the direct transfer of money across borders, with the aim of isolating Moscow from the international financial system.
The British government, for its part, said it will freeze the assets of major Russian banks and exclude them from the UK financial system, while the European Union announced sanctions aimed at the 42% the Russian banking market and key state-owned companies such as defense companies.
Western powers have also imposed sanctions on some Russian millionaires and Putin himself, whose known assets abroad will be frozen.
The private sector is bowing to the restrictions. The Visa and Mastercard firms, for example, announced the blocking of some Russian banks from their payment systems.
In In parallel, there has been an exodus of private companies operating in Russia, including firms such as BP, Shell or Equinor.
At BBC Mundo we talked to Julia Friedlander, senior researcher and director of the Economic Statism Initiative of the Center for Geoeconomics of the Atlantic Council, in the United States, to address the scope of the financial measures against the government of Vladimir Putin.
Friedlander was Senior Policy Advisor for Europe at the US Treasury Department’s Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence and served as a Macroeconomist at the Treasury Department’s Europe Office.
Until 2019 worked at the White House National Security Council on security and economic relations. Previously, he was an analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency, CIA.
What has been the real impact What have the sanctions imposed by the West on Moscow had?
We are trying to understand it because things are changing every moment, in real time.
The Russians raised their interest rate 20% trying to avoid a collapse of their currency, but not they succeeded.
On the other hand, the Central Bank of Russia has reserves in the country that have allowed it to avoid an economic collapse after the sanctions, but the restrictions imposed are harsh.
But to what extent can the sanctions imposed so far have a determining effect? There are analysts who insist on the idea that they are not enough to frustrate Vladimir Putin’s military campaign in Ukraine…
It will take a little while before the Russians exhaust the resources they have to maintain their economy . The Russians still have a financial lifeline with their local reserves, but they could run out pretty quickly.
The scenario is changing. Financial sanctions can cause a collapse of the Russian economy and change the course of the war, but we do not know if that will happen.
What we have seen is that there is an implosion of commercial banking as a result of sanctions.
Economic sanctions have been imposed on countries such as Iran or Venezuela. Is it possible to make some kind of comparison?
Compared to what we have done with Iran or Venezuela, these sanctions are hitting hard. But keep in mind that these economies are minuscule next to Russia.
Russia is the eleventh largest economy in the world. In addition, the sanctions imposed on Iran have taken years, while the sanctions on Russia have been taken in a few days.
What Moscow is facing is unprecedented in the history of sanctions.
What worries you most at the moment?
There are many questions about what the true impact of the measures will be, for example, if the banks will they remain solvent, whether the payment systems will be able to work, whether Russian exports will be hit, or what will happen to the insurance markets and the markets for shipping products.
And there are doubts about what will happen to the commodity markets.
We are concerned about what could happen in the m global credit markets. If there is a default in Russia, that would have an impact in the bondholders.
I am not saying that it will happen but there is a possibility of financial contagion to the rest of the world in that scenario.
If we look at the complete package of sanctions, which are the toughest?
Definitely the measures against the Central Bank of Russia. The use of bank reserves is the harshest sanction we can take in the current scenario.
And if economic sanctions do not achieve the desired result, what would be the next step?
Depends on what the expected results are. What we are trying to do is put enough pressure on the economy so that they cannot continue with the war.
We are using economic weapons to stop a real war, that is the essential objective.