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Why Russia’s grain deal snub isn’t just about attack on Kerch Bridge

The Black Sea Grain Initiative, designed to get Ukrainian grain to desperate global buyers, was one of the few positive international agreements to ameliorate the Ukrainian war’s impact on the global economy.

But Russia pulled out on Monday. While Russia’s adherence to the deal enabled Ukraine to export millions of tons of grain, the Kremlin argues, promised measures that would have facilitated Russian food and fertilizer exports were never implemented by the West.

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The Kremlin’s decision to pull out of a deal to allow Ukrainian grain to get to the global market isn’t simply a matter of spite. While the agreement helped Kyiv and grain buyers, it hasn’t aided Russia, Moscow says.

Russia insists that it’s been ready to step up its own grain exports. But it has been hampered by difficulties regarding insurance for ships transporting its goods, the cutoff of the Russian Agricultural Bank from the SWIFT financial system, and other sanctions-related problems. Despite promises to lift impediments to Russian food exports, nothing has been done, the Russians say.

In addition, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan infuriated the Russians by handing over several interned Ukrainian prisoners of war earlier this month. As a result, Mr. Erdoğan’s appeals for further talks on the grain deal may now fall on deaf ears in Moscow.

“The deal has never given us anything but damage,” says Arkady Zlochevsky, president of Russian Grain Union, an industry group. “A one-sided deal is not profitable for us.”

At a glance, the Kremlin’s announcement Monday of the decision to formally pull Russia out of the deal to keep Ukrainian grain and oilseeds flowing to a hungry world might look like a direct response to the Ukrainian water-borne drone attack that damaged the Kerch Strait Bridge, Crimea’s key link to the Russian mainland.

But this likely was a decision that had been a long time coming.

The Black Sea Grain Initiative brokered by Turkey and the United Nations, despite Russia’s naval blockade of Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, was one of the few positive international agreements that helped to ameliorate the impact of the nearly 17-month-old war on the global economy, particularly the price of basic foodstuffs.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The Kremlin’s decision to pull out of a deal to allow Ukrainian grain to get to the global market isn’t simply a matter of spite. While the agreement helped Kyiv and grain buyers, it hasn’t aided Russia, Moscow says.

But while Russia’s adherence to the complex deal enabled Ukraine to export millions of tons of grain to the world market, Russia argues, promised measures that would have facilitated Russian food and fertilizer exports were never implemented by the West.

Moreover, a worsening geopolitical environment may have contributed to Moscow’s decision to terminate the arrangement. The Ukrainian attack on the Kerch Bridge likely increased Russian determination to assert greater naval control over the Black Sea region.

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