U.S. Extends Russian Oil Sanctions Waiver Despite Earlier Bessent Pledge
The U.S. government recently extended a sanctions waiver that allows continued imports of Russian oil. MS NOW reported the move as a reversal after earlier signals the waiver would lapse. The extension came despite an earlier pledge from a senior official named Bessent to end the waiver. The publication framed the extension as a policy shift by the administration.
Analysts say extending waivers can blunt the force of sanctions and send mixed signals to international buyers and partners. Observers note the decision could complicate efforts to pressure Moscow while keeping supply disruptions and fuel prices lower for some markets.
This represents a clear narrative shift from earlier coverage that emphasized firm pledges to end such waivers. MS NOW's reporting framed the change as a reversal and is among the first mainstream pieces to describe it that way. Readers who followed earlier promises will see this as a departure from prior commitments and a reminder that sanctions policy can shift with changing priorities.
📌 Key Facts
- Treasury extended a general license pausing certain Russian oil sanctions for 30 days on shipments loaded as of Friday, April 17, 2026.
- The extension follows a prior 30-day license issued in March for Russian oil loaded by March 11, 2026.
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent publicly ruled out any renewal on Wednesday, but the administration reversed course two days later without immediate explanation.
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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