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2026-03-09 20:29:33

Congressional Democrats want Trump’s Treasury to cancel a 30-day waiver that lets India keep buying Russian oil

Congressional Democrats have on Monday written to the Trump administration, demanding that they scrap a 30-day sanctions waiver that lets Indian refiners keep buying Russian oil. That letter was sent to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent from Rep. Sam Liccardo of California and Sen. Ruben Gallego of Arizona. Sam and Ruben wrote:- “Rather than performing the necessary contingency planning that would keep India and other allies supplied with alternative sources, the Administration’s hapless approach has allowed Russia and other adversaries to profit from oil reserves previously constrained by sanctions, supporting Russian efforts to harm U.S. troops and thwart U.S. intelligence.” Democrats are unhappy with Trump’s Treasury on softness over Russian oil Sam and Ruben said the oil surge is not even the only problem. They wrote that the more serious issue is the lifeline the United States has given Russia at the same time U.S. officials confirmed that Russia is giving Iranian forces the locations of American military assets, including warships and aircraft. They told Scott that the waiver signals that the United States will reward attacks on U.S. troops instead of discouraging them. They asked for answers by Friday, March 13. Their first question asked whether Treasury plans to keep offering waivers or other sanctions relief under the Russian Harmful Foreign Activities Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR part 587, or the Ukraine-/Russia-Related Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR part 589, if the Strait of Hormuz stays closed. Their second asked what Treasury is doing to stop Russian oil from filling the gap in global supply created by the closure of the strait or restricted passage through it. The third question asked what Treasury knew, before granting the waiver, about Russian intelligence-sharing with Iran, and whether that knowledge affected the decision. The fourth asked whether Treasury consulted the Department of Defense, the State Department, or the Intelligence Community before issuing the waiver, and what those talks produced. The fifth asked what exact conditions would lead to the waiver being revoked, including whether there is a military, intelligence, or diplomatic trigger for ending it. Lawmakers demand oil data, allied contacts, and war planning records from Trump The Democrats’ then asked whether Treasury has measured how much extra revenue Russia will make during the 30-day period and whether that estimate will be shared with Congress. “Prior to authorizing military action against Iran, did Treasury conduct a sanctions contingency analysis examining the economic consequences of Strait of Hormuz closure or significant Middle East supply disruption? If so, will you provide that analysis to Congress?” the lawmakers asked. The lawmakers then asked Scott whether his Treasury even coordinated with the authority to release oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve before or right after hostilities started, and if not, why not? The eleventh asked which allied governments were consulted before the waiver was issued and whether any objected because it could weaken the joint sanctions system built after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Sam and Reuben finished with , “Has Treasury assessed whether this waiver creates a precedent that other countries will invoke, effectively eroding the sanctions regime built in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine? What consultations did Treasury conduct with G7 finance ministers and the EU prior to the decision to strike Iran, regarding contingency plans for energy market disruption?” Meanwhile, House Majority Whip Tom Emmer urged calm on Monday as oil prices climbed on fallout from the Iran war. Appearing on CNBC’s Squawk Box, Tom called the conflict a “short-term experience.” Tom also said, “Yes, there are going to be some temporary effects on our domestic economy, but as soon as this is taken care of, those prices will tumble, and people will recognize that this was a short-term cost to pay for a major long-term gain in terms of peace and security.” If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter .

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