… an economic conflict of a ferocity and scope not seen since the 1940s
… Worryingly, so far the sanctions war is not going as well as expected
… Behind such ambitious goals lies a new doctrine of Western power
… The unipolar moment of the 1990s, when America’s supremacy was uncontested, is long gone
… Sanctions seemed … exert power through its control of the financial and technological networks
… But the Russia embargo takes sanctions to a new level by aiming to cripple the world’s 11th-biggest economy
… one of the biggest exporters of energy, grain and other commodities
… the knockout blow has not materialised
… Energy sales will generate a current-account surplus of $265bn
… the world’s second-largest after China
… Russia’s financial system has stabilised and the country is finding new suppliers for some imports
… Meanwhile in Europe, an energy crisis may trigger a recession
… full or partial embargoes are not being enforced by over 100 countries with 40% of world GDP
… Urals oil is flowing to Asia
… Dubai is brimming with Russian cash
… can fly with Emirates and others to Moscow seven times a day
… most countries have no desire to enforce Western policy
… as with Russia, China’s economy would be unlikely to collapse
… Beijing could retaliate by, say, starving the West of electronics, batteries and pharmaceuticals
… leaving Walmart’s shelves empty and triggering chaos
… Given that more countries depend on China than America as their largest trading partner
… The more that countries fear Western sanctions tomorrow, the less willing they will be to enforce embargoes on others today
… Nobody can counter aggression through dollars and semiconductors alone