The primary difference between primary and secondary sanctions lies in who they target and where they apply: primary sanctions target domestic citizens and companies, while secondary sanctions target foreign entities in third-party countries.
Key Differences
- Primary Sanctions: These are direct restrictions applied to a country's own citizens, residents, and domestic businesses. In the U.S., for example, primary sanctions prohibit U.S. persons or companies from trading with a sanctioned target (like a specific country or individual).
- Secondary Sanctions: These are "bank shots" designed to pressure non-domestic entities (those in third-party countries) to stop doing business with the primary target. They force a choice: a foreign company can either do business with the sanctioned country or with the sanctioning nation, but not both.
- Jurisdiction: Primary sanctions rely on direct legal jurisdiction over domestic actors. Secondary sanctions are extraterritorial, using access to major financial systems (like the U.S. dollar) as leverage to influence parties outside the sanctioning country's direct legal reach.
Other Kinds of Sanctions
Sanctions are also categorized by their scope and focus area:
- By Scope:
- Comprehensive Sanctions: Full embargoes that target an entire country's economy, often prohibiting almost all trade and financial transactions (e.g., against North Korea or Cuba).
- Targeted (or "Smart") Sanctions: Directed at specific individuals, organizations, or sectors rather than a whole population, such as freezing the assets of high-ranking officials or blocking a specific bank.
- Sectoral Sanctions: Target key industries of a country's economy, such as energy, finance, or defense, to limit economic growth without cutting off all trade.
- By Type of Measure:
- Economic & Trade: Embargoes, import/export restrictions (like arms embargoes), and tariffs.
- Financial: Asset freezes, blocking access to international payment systems (like SWIFT), and banning investment.
- Diplomatic: Expelling diplomats, suspending diplomatic ties, or canceling high-level government meetings.
- Individual/Travel: Freezing bank accounts, real estate, and yachts, or banning specific people from traveling to the sanctioning country.
- Symbolic/Cultural: Banning national sports teams from international competitions (e.g., FIFA or the Olympics).