Dictators No Peace Trade List ((full))
The "Dictators No Peace" trade list is a comprehensive catalog of entities, organizations, and individuals that are subject to international sanctions, trade restrictions, or other forms of economic penalties due to their involvement in or support of dictatorial regimes, conflict zones, or terrorist activities. This list is not exhaustive, as new additions are made regularly by various governments and international organizations. However, it provides a substantial overview of the key players and entities that are currently subject to such restrictions.
When a dictator is added to a global blacklist, nationalist anger often surges. After the U.S. added Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro to its SDN list in 2017, his approval rating, at 22%, climbed to 34% in six months. “The gringo embargo” became propaganda fuel, enabling Maduro to blame all domestic shortages on the list rather than his own policies. dictators no peace trade list
The turning point came with the 1949 Geneva Conventions and later the 1990s post-Cold War consensus. The idea was simple: if a dictator violates international law—invading a neighbor, committing genocide, or refusing peace talks—the international community would impose a collective trade denial. The “no peace” condition is key. It distinguishes between stable authoritarian states (e.g., modern Vietnam or Singapore, which trade openly) and rogue regimes actively destabilizing their region. The "Dictators No Peace" trade list is a