The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control has added several Kyrgyzstan-based companies to its sanctions list over their involvement with a ruble-backed stablecoin called A7A5. Authorities accuse the firms, including A7 LLC, Old Vector, and subsidiaries like A7 Agent, of helping Russia sidestep economic restrictions tied to its war in Ukraine. These companies were part of a growing crypto network that operated under the radar until now.
A7A5 is pegged to the Russian ruble and has quietly moved billions in volume. It reportedly handled over 51 billion dollars across platforms linked to Russian markets, with daily flows sometimes crossing the one billion mark. That kind of volume is hard to miss. Most of the transactions were routed through a Kyrgyz-based crypto exchange called Grinex, which many view as the follow-up act to Garantex, an earlier sanctioned exchange that was forced offline.
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This new wave of sanctions draws a clear line between Grinex and its predecessor. Garantex had previously been caught enabling large-scale crypto payments tied to darknet markets and ransomware groups. When it was shut down, Grinex picked up the pieces and kept the system running with the help of A7A5. Now, both Grinex and the infrastructure supporting the stablecoin have landed in the Treasury’s crosshairs.
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Kyrgyzstan might seem like an unlikely place for international crypto operations, but it has quietly become a haven for digital asset firms. Lawmakers passed a law in 2022 that created a regulatory path for virtual asset service providers, and authorities handed out more than 100 licenses shortly after. That legal framework gave platforms like A7A5 and Grinex room to grow without too much interference. For Russian entities trying to dodge financial barriers, it became an ideal spot to operate.
The move by OFAC adds more pressure on stablecoin issuers and crypto platforms to vet their operations. U.S. persons are now barred from doing business with any entity tied to A7A5 or its associated firms. The message is clear. Being digital doesn’t exempt financial products from regulatory scrutiny, especially when they are being used to work around geopolitical sanctions.
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For exchanges and stablecoin operators, this action signals a growing need to take compliance seriously, even if they are based in jurisdictions with looser regulations. The days of hoping to fly under the radar are fading fast. Stronger KYC rules, transaction monitoring, and transparency may now be necessary just to stay out of trouble.
This is another sign that regulators are no longer just chasing headlines. They are digging into the technical layers of stablecoin ecosystems and going after the networks that power them. Countries trying to use crypto as a backdoor for sanctioned financial flows are learning that the Treasury is watching, and it is starting to act.
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