The U.S. Department of Commerce, which oversees export controls, is mobilizing staff around the globe to halt illicit shipments of computers, aircraft parts, marine equipment and other technology to Russia, partnering with allied countries and U.S. law enforcement agencies like the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security to crack down on the newly illegal trade, according to U.S. officials.
Axelrod said the Commerce Department has begun "robust engagement with U.S. exporters and other partners to ensure they understand the new rules," which aim to keep chips and other items made at home and abroad from Russia. The measures, coupled with tough banking sanctions and the targeting of Russian oligarchs, have not deterred Moscow, whose forces have seized Europe's biggest nuclear power plant in Ukraine and besieged and bombarded several cities as residents desperately try to flee the most devastating European conflict since World War Two.As part of the highly coordinated responses to the invasion, foreign partners must either abide by U.S.
China's going to gain thru Russia sanctions.