Nate Sibley
![](https://static.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/27742/a_eu-money-denmark-bank-04092019-1.jpg)
Beyond reputational damage, inclusion on the EU blacklist carried potentially serious implications for many countries, as it would have subjected their citizens and businesses to stricter background checks by European banks and others covered by its anti-money laundering laws. In the latest twist in an already tense relationship between the U.S. and EU over such policy, the U.S. Treasury issued an irate missive in which it attacked the European Commission’s “flawed” methodology and instructed financial institutions to ignore the proposed blacklist altogether. The Treasury Department also accused the commission of undermining established multilateral efforts to develop an existing anti-money laundering blacklistmaintained by the Financial Action Task Force, the global anti-money laundering watchdog. The king of Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, expressed his concerns over the effect on trade and investment links with the EU. These misgivings were picked up by member states, led by the United Kingdom, which lobbied against the move internally under pressure from both Washington and Riyadh. .
No comments:
Post a Comment