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Putin’s Pollock: US seafood imports fuel Russian war machine

By JOSHUA GOODMAN and HELEN WIEFFERING
Associated Press

MIAMI (AP) — A U.S. ban on seafood imports from Russia over its invasion of Ukraine was supposed to sap billions of dollars from Vladimir Putin’s war machine. But shortcomings in import regulations mean that Russian-caught pollock, salmon and crab are likely to enter the U.S. anyway, by way of the country vital to seafood supply chains across the world: China. Like the U.S. seafood industry, Russian companies rely heavily on China to process their catch, which then can be re-exported to the U.S. as a “product of China.”  The result: Nearly a third of the wild-caught fish imported from China was caught in Russian waters. 

Article Topic Follows: AP National Business

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