Putin and Biden’s meeting did not affect US decisions on anti-Russian sanctions

The meeting of the Russian and American presidents Vladimir Putin and Joe Bayden in Geneva did not affect US decisions on anti-Russian sanctions. This was told about the spokesman for the White House of Jen Psaki, it quotes The New York Times.

According to her, after the Summit of Russia and the United States has not changed anything: in the White House continue and will continue to insist on the gradual strengthening of sanctions.

“The law requires that we continue to consider the possibility of sanctions related to the use of chemical weapons,” said Psaki.

We are talking about anti-Russian measures introduced due to the situation around Alexei Navalny (founder of the Foundation for the Fight of Corruption, included by the Ministry of Emergency Situations in the Register of Organizations Performing Functions of the Foreign Agent).

On March 2, the United States announced the commissioning of sanctions against the seven senior representatives of the Russian authority due to the situation with Alexey Navalny. Before this, the sanctions in the Oppositionist entered the European Union. In particular, the director of the FSB, Alexander Bortnikov, the Prosecutor General of the Krasnov, the head of the FSIN Alexander Kalashnikov, got into the sanction list.

The oppositionist fell into one to whom on August 2020, he became bad during the flight from Tomsk to Moscow. On August 22, he was taken to the German clinic, whose doctors declared the poisoning of the Russian substance from the Novice group. Russian physicians of traces of poisons did not find.

On February 2, the Simonovsky Court of Moscow abolished the vasal verdict in the case of “Yves Rocher” for violating the conditions for compliance with the probationary period. He was sentenced to 3.5 years in prison. In the colony, according to the decision of the Moscow City Court of February 20, will stay 2.5 years. Currently, the Navalny is in the colony in the Vladimir region.

/Media reports.