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GeopoliticsMonday, June 15, 2026

EU Sanctions Putin’s ‘Confessor’ and Russia’s Top Prosecutor in Sweeping New Package

Brussels targets over 80 individuals and entities, including Metropolitan Tikhon and Prosecutor General Gutsan, over propaganda, Navalny’s death, and the shadow oil fleet.

The European Union has imposed its latest round of sanctions on Russia, placing more than 80 individuals and entities on its blacklist in a move that strikes at the Kremlin’s inner circle, its military-industrial complex, and the networks sustaining its war economy. The most symbolically charged additions are Alexander Gutsan, Russia’s newly appointed prosecutor general, and Metropolitan Tikhon of Simferopol and Crimea, widely described in Russian media as President Vladimir Putin’s personal confessor. The package, announced on 15 June, explicitly links Gutsan to the persecution of the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny, citing his role in designating Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation as a terrorist organisation, while Tikhon is accused of playing an active part in spreading propaganda that justifies the armed aggression against Ukraine.

Beyond these high-profile figures, the sanctions sweep up a broad cross-section of individuals and companies. Former children’s ombudsman Pavel Astakhov was listed for his appearances on pro-Kremlin state media, alongside Supreme Court Justice Oleg Nefedov, several FSB officers allegedly involved in the surveillance and poisoning of Navalny, and the former chief doctor of the Omsk hospital who denied the politician was poisoned. On the corporate side, the facial-recognition firm NtechLab, already sanctioned in 2023, saw its parent structure targeted again, while oil-related entities Lukoil–West Siberia and Gazpromneft Shipping were added to tighten the squeeze on Russian crude exports. Crucially, the EU also designated two individuals and 24 entities in Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong, Liberia and other jurisdictions, aiming to disrupt the so-called shadow fleet that Moscow uses to circumvent the oil price cap.

Viewed from Brussels, the new listings are a calibrated escalation designed to signal that the bloc will pursue enablers of the war far beyond the battlefield. European officials stressed that the measures respond to Russia’s “malign actions” and hybrid operations, including disinformation campaigns and the continued illegal annexation of Crimea. Analysts in London note that by targeting a figure like Metropolitan Tikhon—who has neither confirmed nor denied being Putin’s spiritual adviser—the EU is deliberately piercing the aura of untouchability around the president’s closest associates. In Moscow, the reaction has been predictably dismissive, with state media framing the sanctions as proof of Western hostility, though the inclusion of the Presidential Fund for Cultural Initiatives and prominent pro-war bloggers underscores the breadth of the EU’s net.

Looking ahead, the package reinforces a pattern of incremental but persistent pressure. While the immediate financial impact on individuals may be limited, the designation of shipping entities and third-country facilitators complicates the logistical chains that keep Russian oil flowing to global markets. More broadly, the sanctions serve as a legal and reputational marker: they embed the narrative of Navalny’s poisoning and death into the EU’s official record and hold individuals accountable long after the event. As the war grinds on, Brussels appears determined to keep tightening the screws, betting that cumulative measures will erode the Kremlin’s ability to sustain its military campaign and its information war.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

24%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa russa e CSIStampa europea continentale
Stampa russa e CSI/ stato
indignazionevittimismoscetticismo

The EU's latest sanctions against senior Russian officials, including the prosecutor general and Metropolitan Tikhon, are yet another hostile move that criminalizes institutional and spiritual figures. The accusations of undermining democracy actually conceal an attempt to interfere in internal affairs and punish those who defend national sovereignty. Moscow considers these restrictions illegitimate and politically driven.

Stampa europea continentale
pragmatismodistacco

The European Union has imposed new sanctions on more than 80 Russian individuals and entities, including Prosecutor General Gutsan and Metropolitan Tikhon, seen as Putin's spiritual advisor. The measures target those responsible for internal repression and support of the war against Ukraine, as Brussels seeks to increase pressure on the Kremlin.

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Upd. 06:09 PM2 languages · 2 outlets
2 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Monday, June 15, 2026

EU Sanctions Putin’s ‘Confessor’ and Russia’s Top Prosecutor in Sweeping New Package

Brussels targets over 80 individuals and entities, including Metropolitan Tikhon and Prosecutor General Gutsan, over propaganda, Navalny’s death, and the shadow oil fleet.

The European Union has imposed its latest round of sanctions on Russia, placing more than 80 individuals and entities on its blacklist in a move that strikes at the Kremlin’s inner circle, its military-industrial complex, and the networks sustaining its war economy. The most symbolically charged additions are Alexander Gutsan, Russia’s newly appointed prosecutor general, and Metropolitan Tikhon of Simferopol and Crimea, widely described in Russian media as President Vladimir Putin’s personal confessor. The package, announced on 15 June, explicitly links Gutsan to the persecution of the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny, citing his role in designating Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation as a terrorist organisation, while Tikhon is accused of playing an active part in spreading propaganda that justifies the armed aggression against Ukraine.

Beyond these high-profile figures, the sanctions sweep up a broad cross-section of individuals and companies. Former children’s ombudsman Pavel Astakhov was listed for his appearances on pro-Kremlin state media, alongside Supreme Court Justice Oleg Nefedov, several FSB officers allegedly involved in the surveillance and poisoning of Navalny, and the former chief doctor of the Omsk hospital who denied the politician was poisoned. On the corporate side, the facial-recognition firm NtechLab, already sanctioned in 2023, saw its parent structure targeted again, while oil-related entities Lukoil–West Siberia and Gazpromneft Shipping were added to tighten the squeeze on Russian crude exports. Crucially, the EU also designated two individuals and 24 entities in Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong, Liberia and other jurisdictions, aiming to disrupt the so-called shadow fleet that Moscow uses to circumvent the oil price cap.

Viewed from Brussels, the new listings are a calibrated escalation designed to signal that the bloc will pursue enablers of the war far beyond the battlefield. European officials stressed that the measures respond to Russia’s “malign actions” and hybrid operations, including disinformation campaigns and the continued illegal annexation of Crimea. Analysts in London note that by targeting a figure like Metropolitan Tikhon—who has neither confirmed nor denied being Putin’s spiritual adviser—the EU is deliberately piercing the aura of untouchability around the president’s closest associates. In Moscow, the reaction has been predictably dismissive, with state media framing the sanctions as proof of Western hostility, though the inclusion of the Presidential Fund for Cultural Initiatives and prominent pro-war bloggers underscores the breadth of the EU’s net.

Looking ahead, the package reinforces a pattern of incremental but persistent pressure. While the immediate financial impact on individuals may be limited, the designation of shipping entities and third-country facilitators complicates the logistical chains that keep Russian oil flowing to global markets. More broadly, the sanctions serve as a legal and reputational marker: they embed the narrative of Navalny’s poisoning and death into the EU’s official record and hold individuals accountable long after the event. As the war grinds on, Brussels appears determined to keep tightening the screws, betting that cumulative measures will erode the Kremlin’s ability to sustain its military campaign and its information war.

Source divergence

Geopolitics · 2 outlets · 2 languages

24%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral14%
Critical86%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa russa e CSIStampa europea continentale
Stampa russa e CSI/ stato
indignazionevittimismoscetticismo

The EU's latest sanctions against senior Russian officials, including the prosecutor general and Metropolitan Tikhon, are yet another hostile move that criminalizes institutional and spiritual figures. The accusations of undermining democracy actually conceal an attempt to interfere in internal affairs and punish those who defend national sovereignty. Moscow considers these restrictions illegitimate and politically driven.

Stampa europea continentale
pragmatismodistacco

The European Union has imposed new sanctions on more than 80 Russian individuals and entities, including Prosecutor General Gutsan and Metropolitan Tikhon, seen as Putin's spiritual advisor. The measures target those responsible for internal repression and support of the war against Ukraine, as Brussels seeks to increase pressure on the Kremlin.

This story appeared in

2 outlets · 2 languages

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