The European Commission has demanded that Spain, France and Austria fully incorporate into national law an EU directive criminalising the evasion of bloc-wide sanctions, threatening to refer the three countries to the European Court of Justice if they fail to comply within two months. The directive, which was supposed to be transposed by May 2025, aims to create uniform criminal penalties across the Union for breaching restrictive measures, particularly those imposed in response to Russia’s aggression against Ukraine. Brussels has warned that unsatisfactory progress will lead to financial penalties imposed by the CJEU, marking a significant escalation in the enforcement of the sanctions regime.
Brussels sets two-month deadline for Spain, France, Austria
The formal notice issued by the Commission gives the three member states a final opportunity to align their legal frameworks with the directive before legal action is taken. According to the report by Democrata, the deadline underscores the EU’s growing frustration with persistent gaps in implementation that have allowed individuals and companies linked to Moscow to exploit weaker jurisdictions. The directive requires member states to treat serious violations of EU sanctions as criminal offences, with harmonised penalties that facilitate cross-border investigations and prosecutions.
Why harmonised criminal penalties matter for enforcement
Legal experts note that without consistent criminalisation, sanctions enforcement remains patchy: what is a crime in one EU country may only be an administrative infraction in another. This asymmetry creates opportunities for Russian-affiliated entities to route prohibited goods and funds through states with lighter penalties, weakening the collective impact of the restrictions. The Commission has repeatedly stressed that full transposition of the directive is essential to close loopholes that allow dual-use technology, military components and capital to flow into Russia, sustaining its war effort. The delays in Spain, France and Austria have been attributed to legal and procedural difficulties in harmonising existing national codes with EU requirements, but Brussels is no longer willing to accept further postponements.
How sanctions loopholes affect British security and business
While the United Kingdom is no longer a member of the EU, British interests are directly tied to the effectiveness of the European sanctions regime. The UK maintains its own independent sanctions against Russia and coordinates closely with EU partners, meaning any gap in enforcement on the continent can be exploited to re-route goods or money through Europe and into British supply chains or financial systems. British companies operating in the three affected countries face uncertainty as long as the legal framework remains incomplete, potentially complicating compliance obligations if they handle sanctioned items or deal with entities under investigation. Moreover, the failure to curb sanctions evasion prolongs Russia’s access to revenue and dual-use goods, directly contributing to the military threat that continues to jeopardise European — including British — security. The longer legal gaps persist, the harder it becomes to maintain maximum economic pressure on Moscow and to reduce the long-term security risks for European states.