The U.S. Congress gave final approval to legislation revoking normal trade relation status from Russia and Belarus, sending the White House-backed bill to President Joe Biden for his signature.

The House passed the bill 420-3 Thursday, just hours after the Senate cleared it on a rare 100-0 vote. It would put Russia and Belarus in the same category as pariah states such as North Korea and Cuba, adding to the growing list of economic barriers erected by the U.S. and its allies to punish Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government over the invasion of Ukraine.

“This is another tightening of the noose around Vladimir Putin and we will make him pay,” Oregon Democrat Earl Blumenauer, who co-authored the bill, said on the House floor.

Representative Kevin Brady, a Texas Republican, said the legislation “will stop American dollars from funding Putin’s bloodletting.”

Biden sought the legislation and has pledged to sign the bill, though the White House has not yet said when.

The bill allows the U.S. to impose large tariff increases on goods from Russia and Belarus, which has hosted some of the Russian troops who invaded Ukraine. Under the legislation, the tariffs on iron and some steel products could be raised to 20% from 0%. Plywood could face a 50% levy and some reaction engines could have import taxes of 35%, according to a Senate Democratic aide.

“No nation whose military is committing war crimes deserves free trade status with the United States,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said on the floor Thursday morning.

Biden last month already banned imports of signature Russian products including oil, gas, vodka, seafood and industrial diamonds. The Senate also passed a bill Thursday to bar U.S. imports of Russian oil, gas and coal, which the House was expected to take up quickly on Thursday.

The trade bill was delayed in the Senate for about a week because of a hold up from Senator Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican, about the wording of an expansion of the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act, which was embedded in the bill. Other squabbles among senators also delayed action. Lawmakers ultimately reached a deal after weeks of haggling.

That provision would authorize the Biden administration to impose further sanctions on Russian officials for human rights violations. Paul wanted the legislation, which is named for a Russian lawyer who died in custody after investigating tax fraud, to be more specific about the types of transgressions that would trigger sanctions. He agreed to stop blocking the bill after reaching a compromise with Senate leaders.

An initial version of the bill passed the House in March, but revisions in the Senate meant the legislation needed to clear the chamber again in order to go to Biden.

By mid-March, a quarter of the World Trade Organization’s 164 members—collectively representing 58% of the global gross domestic product—were poised to stop treating Russia as a so-called most-favored-nation under WTO rules.

Besides the U.S., the list includes the European Union’s 27 members, Japan, the U.K., Canada, South Korea and Australia.