In a fresh attempt to avoid getting stung for enabling Russia to circumvent Western-imposed sanctions, Kazakhstan will from next month introduce an online system designed to track all goods entering and exiting the country.
The system, which a senior official has told Eurasianet is due to come into effect from April 1, appears to be the most concerted effort to date by Kazakhstan to demonstrate compliance with Western efforts to isolate Russia’s economy in reprisal for the ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
“Our government has repeatedly and very clearly stated that Kazakhstan does not apply any sanctions and restrictions in trade with Russia. However, it will not allow the circumvention of Western sanctions and will not become a platform for such circumvention,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “We understand all the risks of secondary sanctions, so we closely monitor our mutual trade with all partners.”
Those remarks accurately convey the complexity of the challenge facing Kazakhstan, which wants to avoid angering its belligerent and economically important neighbor to the north while continuing to cultivate fruitful ties with Europe and the United States.
Foreign Minister Mukhtar Tleuberdi made no secret of those anxieties in his remarks alongside U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who swung through Astana last month.
“Kazakhstan has very historic ties with both Russia and Ukraine,” Tleuberdi said, speaking in English. “Our economies are interconnected for a long, long time, and that’s why definitely all this situation is quite heavy for us, for our economy, and we [are] trying to avoid any negative effects from the sanctions.”
The main obstacles to compliance are geography and the current trading regime under which Kazakhstan operates.
Kazakhstan and Russia are both members of a five-nation Eurasian Economic Union, also known by the acronym EAEU. That means in theory that there are no customs checks on goods crossing their 7,600-kilometer border.
That has over recent years contributed to consolidating Russia’s role as Kazakhstan’s primary trading partner. So it was hardly any surprise that when the pipeline of Western goods to Russia was turned off, Moscow looked to its neighbors – such as Kazakhstan, but also other countries in Central Asia and the Caucasus – as a backdoor.
“Information collected by the Geneva-based Trade Data Monitor indicates that some sanctioned goods – particularly advanced semiconductors – are being diverted to Russia via third countries, many of which abruptly changed their trading habits following Russia’s invasion,” Bloomberg reported earlier this month.
The figures speak for themselves. In the calendar year before the war began, Kazakhstan exported a paltry $12,000 worth of advanced semiconductors to Russia. In 2022, this amount shot up to $3.7 million.
And then there are the figures that are more difficult to pin down. Anecdotal evidence suggests a growing shuttle-trading industry has emerged to fill the demand for high-tech consumer goods and other sought-after items.
Recently published research from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development also “provides evidence suggestive of intermediated trade via [Russia’s] neighboring economies being used to circumvent the sanctions.”
“We saw the emergence of intermediated trade – an increase in Western exports to Central Asian and the Caucasus countries accompanied by an increase in exports from these countries to Russia,” explained EBRD chief economist Beata Javorcik.
The patterns of falling exports from the EU to Russia and rising exports to Central Asia and the Caucasus “are particularly pronounced for product groups partially or fully subject to the EU sanctions as well as goods that are similar to the sanctioned ones,” the EBRD report said.
After the introduction of sanctions, EU exports of sanctioned goods to EAEU members Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Armenia rose by an extra 30 percent compared to exports of other goods, the authors concluded, after studying data from January 2017 to August 2022.
It is not only Russia’s direct trading partners that need to be vigilant in helping stem the flow, according to Western officials engineering the sanctions regime.
After all, it is usually not the nations helping Russia meet its demands for semiconductors and similar high-tech material that are producing the components themselves.
U.S. Treasury sanctions compliance advice makes it clear that Western exporters are responsible for ensuring sanctioned goods are not reaching Russia via third countries.
A report by Reuters from earlier this month illustrated in practice how this parallel flow is working. Citing seven anonymous sources familiar with the situation, the news agency wrote of how “Russian companies have flooded their Kazakh partners … with new requests to help them … import badly needed goods.”
“Russians have a very long shopping list which includes industrial equipment, railway bearings, advanced electronics, radio equipment, turbines, airplane parts, raw materials, and even bank card materials,” Reuters said in its report, citing the testimony of its sources.
This boom in business is clearly evidenced by Kazakh official data showing how exports to Russia rose by 25 percent last year.
To ensure no inadvertent sanctions-busting is happening, Kazakhstan and the U.S. government have been liaising, as Tleuberdi noted during Blinken’s visit. Astana is grateful that the Americans “inform us in advance of possible cases over which secondary sanctions could be applied,” the Kazakh foreign minister told reporters.
And while Kazakhstan has incurred no secondary sanctions, Washington has slapped them on an Uzbek company over supplies of microcircuits to Russia.
Although there have been no nasty surprises yet, officials in Astana are urging businesses to be wary of the risks of trading with Russia in the current climate. The Kazakh official who spoke to Eurasianet said the government “is constantly working to reduce the risks of re-export” and has set up an online database informing companies about sanctions. The import-export monitoring system coming online next month is another piece of the puzzle.
“Suspicious trade operations are subjected to a thorough analysis and, if necessary, administrative measures are taken,” the official said.
Source : Eurasianet