Follow us on social

2022-04-07t100244z_1649325940_dpam220407x99x831208_rtrfipp_4_politics-diplomacy-scaled

Even the Treasury Department admits sanctions don't work

Is the U.S. finally recognizing that economic warfare isn't achieving its foreign policy objectives, anywhere?

Analysis | North America

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said recently that U.S. sanctions on Iran simply are not working, or at least working “much less than we would ideally like.” This was quite a significant admission, as Yellen heads the government agency responsible for developing and imposing U.S. trade and economic sanctions regimes.

Is the U.S. government finally recognizing that sanctions are falling short of their stated foreign policy objectives? Secretary Yellen appeared to admit as much, saying that while U.S. sanctions on Iran have not led to behavior change, they have led to a “real economic crisis in the country, and Iran is greatly suffering economically because of the sanctions.”

Same strategy, same results

Iran is just the latest example of how sanctions rarely, if ever, meet their stated goals yet consistently succeed in causing mass civilian suffering and casualty. In North Korea, for example, U.S. sanctions have created intense barriers to humanitarian aid distribution, as many banks do not want to face the risks associated with navigating transactions to the country. They have gendered impacts, creating a “dire economic and food situation” that forces women into spaces of heightened risk of “sexual and gender-based violence, transactional sex and prostitution, and high levels of trafficking.”

In addition, while causing significant harm to civilians, economic sanctions have failed to prevent North Korea’s proliferation of its ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programs. 

In Venezuela, Alena Douhan, a United Nations Special Rapporteur, found U.S. sanctions have “devastating” impacts that “[violate] the rights to freedom of movement, food, health, education, and access to justice.” While creating and exacerbating economic and humanitarian crises across the country, including the downfall of the economy, U.S. sanctions have not had their stated impact of compelling the Venezuelan government to change its behavior or decrease its power. 

Meanwhile, the U.S. issued broad-based sanctions following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, however, the Russian economy has proved more resilient than anticipated. Most countries still maintain economic and diplomatic ties to Russia rather than isolating the country and Russian military aggression is only increasing with the Kremlin’s announcement to use Belarus as a staging ground for tactical nuclear weapons. These instances demonstrate, as highlighted by Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) President Richard Haass, just how much sanctions “have not come close to persuading Putin to reverse his policy.”

In Afghanistan, after the U.S. military withdrawal in August 2021, the Taliban took control and installed themselves as the country’s de facto government. They have since maintained power, despite being a sanctioned entity on the U.S.’s Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) list since July 2002, and the U.S. freezing Afghan assets. Meanwhile, Afghans suffer as economic and humanitarian devastation sweep the country; World Food Programme (WFP) statistics show there are “more than 6 million people on the brink of famine-like conditions” — exacerbated by U.S. policies.

In Somalia, the March 2008 designation of al-Shabaab played a leading role in drastically reducing and blocking aid during the 2011 famine, resulting in U.S. sanctions policy greatly contributing to the deaths of “about 258,000 people between October 2010 and April 2012,  according to the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET). This famine was predicted and largely preventable. In its wake, al-Shabaab remains an active threat in Somalia today. 

In Cuba, a State Department Memorandum shows that the U.S. embargo, launched in the early 1960s, aimed to weaken support for Fidel Castro “through disenchantment and disaffection based on economic dissatisfaction and hardship.” A 1982 CIA memo lays out these failures, revealing that U.S. sanctions policy towards Cuba: 1) “have not met any of their objectives” 2) “have almost no chance of compelling the present Cuban leadership” 3) “provided Castro with a scapegoat for all kinds of domestic problems” and 4) “Cuban adjustment to the impact of the sanctions left the United States with limited economic means to influence Havana's behavior.” These failures have not altered harsh sanctions, with the Biden administration continuing the Trump-era “maximum pressure” campaign against the country. 

Often serving as another way for the U.S. to promote hegemony in the name of democracy and human rights, regime change is both a dubious objective in and of itself and is one sanctions cannot achieve. Indeed, scholars who have studied whether sanctions lead to regime change agree that “they rarely, if ever, work,” while ample evidence demonstrates that sanctions cause harm to civilian populations and civil society. 

Progress thus far

There is reason to hope that a change in course is possible. The Treasury Department underwent a sanctions modernization process beginning with the October 2021 Sanctions Review, and culminating in two December 2022 policy shifts. First, the U.S. and Ireland co-led the adoption of United Nations Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 2664, creating a standing humanitarian carveout across existing UN sanctions regimes. Second, the Treasury Department implemented the UNSCR domestically by authorizing "Historic Humanitarian Sanctions Exceptions," issuing new and amended general licenses to ease the flow of humanitarian, peacebuilding, and other life-saving activities in sanctioned areas. These initiatives are welcome first steps — but more can and must be done.

Time for a sanctions rethink

The 1982 CIA Memo on Cuba indicates that the U.S. government has had at least 41 years of internal evidence of sanctions not meeting their stated objectives. What can be done to ensure that U.S. foreign policy does not continue this déjà vu?

Humanitarian carveouts alone cannot meaningfully mitigate harms to civilians in sanctioned areas, nor can they create the enabling environment civil society needs to carry out their work in support of these civilians. Without reforms to the U.S. material support statute, which prohibits engagement with designated foreign terrorist organizations (FTOs), critical peacebuilding and humanitarian action by civil society organizations (CSOs) will remain functionally banned. This means that not only is the kind of conflict resolution that could deprive FTOs of the chaos they need to survive effectively prohibited, but many populations forced to live under FTO-controlled territories are unable to receive needed aid.

This is because, under the material support prohibition, CSOs could face civil or criminal liability for engaging these communities. While U.S. foreign policy states intentions to punish terrorist entities, it actually ends up punishing innocent civilians, and undermining its own professed goals of countering terrorism and preventing violent extremism.

Likewise, future sanctions should have built-in sunset provisions. This would provide for data-driven and evidence-based approaches to sanctions regimes, whereby their continuation is not guaranteed, but determined by findings of efficacy. According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), as of now, “Federal agencies do not conduct comprehensive assessments that measure how effective sanctions are in meeting U.S. foreign policy goals.” Current sanctions regimes should be reviewed through routine impact assessments for relevance, efficacy, and to what extent they are meeting their objectives. Precedent should be set to ensure that sanctions that fall short of their intended targets are revamped or discontinued.

The scope of sanctions should be, by matter of practice: targeted, well-defined, time-bound, have clear and measurable objectives, and have specific off-ramps. Further, the U.S. should move beyond implementing broad-based sanctions that ask too much of citizens of other countries that have little control of how their governments operate. 


These are all policy and legal choices. Amendments, reforms, and even more meaningful humanitarian carveouts are all possible — they just require the Biden administration to live up to its promise of implementing a human rights-based foreign policy agenda.

This administration could make history by becoming the first to acknowledge that national security and counterterrorism aims are not at odds with, but rather complementary to, peacebuilding and humanitarian action aims. It can create norms around these aims being mutually beneficial, rather than mutually exclusive. 

To paraphrase Tolkien in the Lord of the Rings, “All that [Biden administration officials] have to decide is what to do with the time that is given [them].” We do not yet know if President Biden will seek or be granted a second term. This administration would be wise to make the most of the time that is given and implement these life-saving changes to sanctions policy as quickly as possible.


Janet Yellen, United States Secretary of the Treasury. (Reuters)
Analysis | North America
Pedro Sanchez
Top image credit: Prime Minister of Spain Pedro Sanchez during the summit of Heads of State and Government of the European Union at the European Council in Brussels in Belgium the 26th of July 2025, Martin Bertrand / Hans Lucas via Reuters Connect

Spain's break from Europe on Gaza is more reaction than vision

Europe

The final stage of the Vuelta a España, Spain’s premier cycling race, was abandoned in chaos on Sunday. Pro-Palestinian protesters, chanting “they will not pass,” overturned barriers and occupied the route in Madrid, forcing organizers to cancel the finale and its podium ceremony. The demonstrators’ target was the participation of an Israeli team. In a statement that captured the moment, Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez expressed his “deep admiration for the Spanish people mobilizing for just causes like Palestine.”

The event was a vivid public manifestation of a potent political sentiment in Spain — one that the Sánchez government has both responded to and, through its foreign policy, legitimized. This dynamic has propelled Spain into becoming the European Union’s most vocal dissenting voice on the war in Gaza, marking a significant break from the transatlantic foreign policy orthodoxy.

Sanchez’s support for the protesters was not merely rhetorical. On Monday, he escalated his stance, explicitly calling for Israel to be barred from international sports competitions, drawing a direct parallel to the exclusion of Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. “Our position is clear and categorical: as long as the barbarity continues, neither Russia nor Israel should participate in any international competition,” he said. This position, which angered Israel and Spanish conservatives alike, was further amplified by his culture minister, who suggested Spain should boycott next year’s Eurovision Song Contest if Israel participates.

More significantly, it emerged that his government had backed its strong words with concrete action, cancelling a €700 million ($825 million) contract for Israeli-designed rocket launchers. This move, following an earlier announcement of measures aimed at stopping what it called “the genocide in Gaza,” demonstrates a willingness to leverage economic and diplomatic tools that other EU capitals have avoided.

Sánchez, a master political survivalist, has not undergone a grand ideological conversion to anti-interventionism. Instead, he has proven highly adept at reading and navigating domestic political currents. His government’s stance on Israel and Palestine is a pragmatic reflection of his coalition that depends on the support of the left for which this is a non-negotiable priority.

This instinct for pragmatic divergence extends beyond Gaza. Sánchez has flatly refused to commit to NATO’s target of spending 5% of GDP on defense demanded by the U.S. President Donald Trump and embraced by NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, citing budgetary constraints and social priorities.

Furthermore, Spain has courted a role as a facilitator between great powers. This ambition was realized when Madrid hosted a critical high level meeting between U.S. and Chinese trade officials on September 15 — a meeting Trump lauded as successful while reaffirming “a very strong relationship” between the U.S. and China. This outreach is part of a consistent policy; Sánchez’s own visit to Beijing, at a time when other EU leaders like the high representative for foreign policy Kaja Kallas were ratcheting up anti-Chinese rhetoric, signals a deliberate pursuit of pragmatic economic ties over ideological confrontation.

Yet, for all these breaks with the mainstream, Sánchez’s foreign policy is riddled with a fundamental contradiction. On Ukraine, his government remains in alignment with the hardline Brussels consensus. This alignment is most clearly embodied by his proxy in Brussels, Iratxe García Pérez, the leader of the Socialists and Democrats (S&D) group in the European Parliament. In a stark display of this hawkishness, García Pérez used the platform of the State of the Union debate with the EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to champion the demand to outright seize frozen Russian sovereign assets.

This reckless stance, which reflects the EU’s broader hawkish drift on Ukraine, is thankfully tempered only by a lack of power to implement it, rendering it largely a symbolic act of virtue signaling. The move is not just of dubious legality; it is a significant error in statecraft. It would destroy international trust in the Eurozone as a safe repository for assets. Most critically, it would vaporize a key bargaining chip that could be essential in securing a future negotiated settlement with Russia. It is a case of ideological posturing overriding strategic calculation.

This contradiction reveals the core of Sánchez’s doctrine: it is circumstantial, not convictional. His breaks with orthodoxy on Israel, defense spending and China are significant, but driven, to a large degree, by the necessity of domestic coalition management. His alignment on Ukraine is the path of least resistance within the EU mainstream, requiring no difficult choices that would upset his centrist instincts or his international standing.

Therefore, Sánchez is no Spanish De Gaulle articulating a grand sovereigntist strategic vision. He is a fascinating case study in the fragmentation of European foreign policy. He demonstrates that even within the heart of the Western mainstream which he represents, dissent on specific issues like Gaza and rearmament is not only possible but increasingly politically necessary.

However, his failure to apply the same pragmatic, national interest lens to Ukraine — opting instead for the bloc’s thoughtless escalation — proves that his policy is more a product of domestic political arithmetic than coherent strategic vision. He is a weathervane, not a compass — but even a weathervane can indicate a shift in the wind, and the wind in Spain is blowing away from unconditional Atlanticism.

US think tanks are the world's least transparent
Top image credit: Metamorworks via shutterstock.com

US think tanks are the world's least transparent

Washington Politics

According to a new survey, North American think tanks are tied as the least transparent of any region. The poll, conducted by On Think Tanks, surveyed 335 think tanks from over 100 countries. The accompanying report, released today, found that only 35% of North American think tanks (mostly from the U.S.) that responded to the survey disclose funding sources. By comparison, 67% of Asian think tanks and 58% of African think tanks disclose their funding sources.

And there are signs that think tank funding transparency is trending towards more opacity. Just last month, the Center for American Progress — a major center-left think tank with $46 million in annual revenue — announced that it would no longer disclose its donors. The think tank said it was taking this “temporary protective step” out of concern that the Trump administration could target them.

keep readingShow less
Fort Bragg horrors expose dark underbelly of post-9/11 warfare
Top photo credit: Seth Harp book jacket (Viking press) US special operators/deviant art/creative commons

Fort Bragg horrors expose dark underbelly of post-9/11 warfare

Media

In 2020 and 2021, 109 U.S. soldiers died at Fort Bragg, the largest military base in the country and the central location for the key Special Operations Units in the American military.

Only four of them were on overseas deployments. The others died stateside, mostly of drug overdoses, violence, or suicide. The situation has hardly improved. It was recently revealed that another 51 soldiers died at Fort Bragg in 2023. According to U.S. government data, these represent more military fatalities than have occurred at the hands of enemy forces in any year since 2013.

keep readingShow less

LATEST

QIOSK

Newsletter

Subscribe now to our weekly round-up and don't miss a beat with your favorite RS contributors and reporters, as well as staff analysis, opinion, and news promoting a positive, non-partisan vision of U.S. foreign policy.