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EU eyeing sanctions targeting Nord Stream and banking sector to pressure Putin

TIRANA, Albania — European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Friday that the European Union is working on a major package of new sanctions against the Kremlin with talks between Russia and Ukraine looking unlikely to yield progress.

“We want peace and we have to apply pressure,” she told reporters as she arrived at a summit of the European Political Community in the Albanian capital of Tirana.

Von der Leyen said the EU is considering sanctions that are more ambitious than a new round of measures adopted on Wednesday. She proposed targeting the Nord Stream natural gas pipelines linking Russia to Europe, Russia’s banking sector and the so-called shadow fleet of aging vessels with obscure ownership and unknown insurance that Moscow uses to skirt oil sanctions.

The head of the EU executive also said the Commission would look to lower the oil price cap, a limit on the sales price for Russian crude oil which is decided at G7 level.

Targeting Russia’s energy and banking sectors would have a “real impact” on the Kremlin, but doing so would be tricky because of Hungarian opposition, an EU diplomat, who was granted anonymity to discuss the preparations, told POLITICO earlier this week.

Asked by POLITICO whether the United States was on board with the new raft of sanctions, von der Leyen said she was “in close contact with Senator [Lindsey] Graham,” the U.S. Republican senator who is a vocal critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Graham has proposed a package of punitive 500 percent tariffs on Russia.

“We are very much aligned on the fields where the sanctions must be,” von der Leyen said.

While Graham is a Donald Trump ally, the U.S. president has not publicly indicated he is ready to enact such punishing sanctions on Russia. Trump told reporters on Thursday there would be no progress toward peace in Ukraine until he meets with Putin, as much-hyped Moscow-Kyiv talks in Turkey turned into a huge nothingburger.

Delegations from the two countries are expected to sit down in Turkey on Friday for the first direct talks since shortly after the start of Russia’s invasion in 2022, but Putin’s decision to skip talks and send a lower-level delegations has been read as an unwillingness to engage in peace discussions.

Arriving in Tirana, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte slammed Putin’s decision to snub the talks as “a mistake,” while the EU’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, said the Russian leader was “playing games.”

“We clearly see that Russia does not want peace and everybody else does,” Kallas said as she arrived at the summit hosted by Albania’s Edi Rama.

Gordon Repinski contributed reporting. Clea Caulcutt reported from Tirana and Koen Verhelst from Brussels.

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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