US Senator Urges Regulators to Increase Scrutiny on Crypto as It Risks Undermining Sanctions Against Russia


U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren is worried that “cryptocurrencies risk undermining sanctions against Russia.” She urges financial regulators “to take this threat seriously and increase their scrutiny of digital assets.”

Senator Elizabeth Warren Worried Russia Could Use Cryptocurrency to Evade Sanctions

As governments worldwide are placing sanctions on Russia following its invasion of Ukraine, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren is worried that cryptocurrency could give Russia a way to evade sanctions. The senator from Massachusetts tweeted Monday:

Cryptocurrencies risk undermining sanctions against Russia, allowing Putin and his cronies to evade economic pain.

“U.S. financial regulators need to take this threat seriously and increase their scrutiny of digital assets,” she added.

Senator Warren’s tweet was heavily criticized in the crypto community. Some people called her ignorant while others said she lied. One person tweeted: “So what you’re saying is that a stateless, permissionless, decentralized, and censorship-resistant currency is out of your control so it must be stopped?”

U.S. Senator Ted Cruz from Texas recently said that Senator Warren does not like bitcoin and cryptocurrency because she cannot control them.

Senator Warren’s tweet includes an article by the New York Times titled “Russia Could Use Cryptocurrency to Blunt the Force of U.S. Sanctions.” Jerry Brito, executive director of D.C.-based think tank Coin Center, pointed out some problems he found in the New York Times article Senator Warren cited.

For example, the article mentions “new tools developed in Russia” that can help mask the origin of cryptocurrency transactions. However, it does not explain what the tools are or give any reference, Brito noted. “And to think that ransomware could make up the income lost to sanctions is to misunderstand the scale of the blockade being imposed,” he added, elaborating:

Could crypto be used to evade sanctions? Of course. Could it be used at a scale that would undermine the measures being taken? I don’t see how.

“Will legitimate crypto intermediaries comply with sanctions obligations? Better than a lot of banks, if recent history is any guide,” the Coin Center executive concluded.

What do you think about Senator Elizabeth Warren’s comments? Let us know in the comments section below.

Kevin Helms

A student of Austrian Economics, Kevin found Bitcoin in 2011 and has been an evangelist ever since. His interests lie in Bitcoin security, open-source systems, network effects and the intersection between economics and cryptography.

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