HomeNewsOpinionOPINION | Too many sanctions may inadvertently chip away at the might of the US dollar

OPINION | Too many sanctions may inadvertently chip away at the might of the US dollar

The overuse of secondary sanctions may end up weakening America’s own financial primacy. The message sent out is overdependence on the dollar represents a strategic vulnerability

November 20, 2025 / 12:50 IST
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The dollar will remain critical for India’s financial architecture for the foreseeable future.

Over the past year, Washington has repeatedly expanded its sanctions regime—tightening restrictions not only on Russia and Iran but also on intermediaries in West Asia, Central Asia, Africa, and East Asia. The pattern is familiar: unilateral measures announced by the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, backed by sweeping secondary sanctions that extend far beyond American borders.

Not an aberration, it’s structural

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While none of these actions is surprising in isolation, their accelerating frequency and unprecedented extraterritorial reach are now raising more structural questions.

For countries like India—which neither participates in unilateral sanctions nor considers them legitimate instruments of global governance—the implications are not ideological. They are commercial, financial, and systemic.