Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly said last week that regime change in Moscow is “definitely” the goal when announcing Canada was banning the import of Russian steel and metal as part of its sanctions campaign against Russia.

“We’re able to see how much we’re isolating the Russian regime right now — because we need to do so economically, politically and diplomatically — and what are the impacts also on society, and how much we’re seeing potential regime change in Russia,” Joly said, according to the National Post.

Joly said regime change and holding Russian President Vladimir Putin accountable was the purpose of the sanctions. “The goal is definitely to do that, is to weaken Russia’s ability to launch very difficult attacks against Ukraine. We want also to make sure that Putin and his enablers are held to account,” she said.

Western sanctions on Russia have failed to hurt the Russian economy in a serious way. Putin’s approval ratings also went up after he launched the war and the US and its allies started implementing sanctions on Russia.

    • ZoomeristLeninist [comrade/them, she/her]M
      ·
      2 years ago

      might just be confusion due to words being weird. steel is an alloy, which means its a metal. but some people think of the periodic table classification of metals and think a metal has to be a single element. but no, metals have certain properties: thermal and electrical conductivity, ductility, and malleability. thus, alloys are metals. even nonmetals like iodine and hydrogen become metals at high pressures. also some metals like sodium can become nonmetallic at the right temp and pressure