- Russia’s yuan reserves are nearly depleted due to Chinese banks’ fear of US sanctions.
- Lenders have urged Russia’s central bank to address the yuan deficit, causing the ruble to drop.
- China’s hesitance stems from US threats of secondary sanctions over Russia’s Ukraine war financing.
The question was answered somewhere along this thread, and you didn’t like the answer. So you can kindly fuck off with your bs.
Funnily enough I can speak to multiple people; nice of you to chime in like that though.
Sanctions, such as those on Iran, saw one incremental change (which I acknowledged with “that’s one… example” and gave context). I hadn’t checked the other example yet. Thanks for white knighting like a twat, really helps.
Edit: the Sudetenland example is not of sanctions, but lack thereof, so not an example of how sanctions have worked.
Awh, you’re upset that I called you on your bs? Cry some more.
Lol, it’s like the incel teen handbook: “upset” “cry more”. Try to be a little more original than kids in Fortnite.
Lol, my dude, do you even know what Incel means? You’re throwing shit at the wall and not making any fucking sense. You’re again just upset that you got called out. So go on and keep crying, champ.
“upset”, “crying”, you are boring and repetitive, and have offered nothing to this thread, nor anyone’s life. On to the blocklist you go.