The Trump administration was gearing up to lift sanctions on Russia when the president took office, but career diplomats ginned up pressure in Congress to block the move, NBC News reported.
It’s the latest evidence that President Trump moved to turn his favorable campaign rhetoric about Russia into concrete action when he took power.

Daniel Fried, who served as a senior diplomat until he retired in late February, said he became aware of the sanctions effort in the early weeks of Trump’s presidency.
“It would be politically stinky,” he said.
Malinowski said he is now concerned that even if the Trump administration doesn’t lift sanctions on Russia, it will stop vigilantly enforcing them. The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Asset Control, which polices sanctions, does not have a permanent chief, and the State Department does not have a permanent sanctions coordinator.
The Washington Post reported in Thursday’s additions that the Trump administration as considering handing back to Russia two U.S. diplomatic compounds that the Obama administration seized as punishment for Russian election hacking.
Russia has not changed it behavior in any substantive way to merit that or other sanctions relief, Malinowski said.
“What was troubling about these stories is that suddenly I was hearing that we were preparing to rescind sanctions in exchange for, well, nothing,” Fried said on MSNBC.
MSNBC
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