ExxonMobil Just Challenged Trump to Get Serious With Russia Policy

Exxon Investors Show Support for Paris Agreement Despite President Trump's Stance · Fortune

Earlier this month, news leaked that ExxonMobil was pushing the Treasury Department to grant it a sanctions waiver, which would allow the company to resume its joint venture Black Sea drilling operations with Russian oil giant Rosneft. The Treasury Department has since denied the waiver application, as waivers are granted for humanitarian and policy reasons, not for business reasons-which was ExxonMobil’s case. Granting the waiver would have fueled concerns about the Trump administration’s relationship with Putin’s Russia, all the more so as Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was ExxonMobil’s CEO when the waiver was initially submitted.

Even though the administration was right to deny the waiver, waivers are a vital part of the sanctions process. They help governments target sanctions effectively, giving them flexibility to respond to changing circumstances on the ground. There are at least two reasons that this ability to target and respond flexibly is important. The first is strictly moral: It is wrong, for example, to harm Iraqi children caught in a dispute between the U.S. and Iraqi governments. The second is more pragmatic: Sanctions effectively aimed at decision makers puts pressure on them, reduces their ability to ally with fellow targets, and reduces opposition to the sanctions on humanitarian grounds. Waivers help to ensure that comprehensive sanctions are more targeted and shaped. Democracies-including limited democracies like apartheid South Africa-are more responsive to sanctions than are dictatorships, and pressure on voters becomes pressure on politicians.

These are lessons hard learned, particularly following Iraq’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait. Initially, the embargo imposed by the UN Security Council on Iraq was comprehensive, rather than targeted, with devastating effects on Iraq’s economy. It wasn’t until 1995 that the U.S. and Iraq came to an “oil for food” agreement to relieve innocent civilians. The agreement allowed Iraq limited oil sales to fund humanitarian imports, UN weapons inspections, and reparations for victims of its 1990 invasion. The Security Council’s initial optimism that comprehensive sanctions could be an inexpensive way of conducting foreign policy, gave way, instead, to abandoning comprehensive sanctions in favor of “smart” or targeted sanctions.

Thus, with Iran in the 2000s and 2010s, the United States and its European partners sought to learn lessons from Iraq. During the toughest period of sanctions imposition, the United States expanded the definition of medical goods permitted to go to Iran without a license in order to prevent undue suffering on the part of the Iranian population. This waiver, which required no quid pro quo from Iran, sought to alleviate Iranian civilian suffering of the Iranian people notwithstanding the underlying dispute, while also weakening the perception that Iranians were suffering due to sanctions.