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US And E3 ‘Pretty Much Aligned’ Over Iran

Iran International Newsroom
Oct 22, 2022, 15:23 GMT+1Updated: 17:51 GMT+1

Iran Saturday criticized France, Germany, and the United Kingdom for taking to the United Nations Security Council Tehran’s reported supply of drones to Russia.

Nasser Kanaani, the foreign ministry spokesman, said the claims over armed drones were “false and baseless” and called for “an immediate end to the war in Ukraine through a political process.” The spokesman recalled the supplies from Europe – principally Germany – that enabled Saddam Hussein’s regime to produce chemical weapons used against Iran in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war.

The souring of relations between Iran and the ‘E3’ comes as Europeans submitted a letter Friday to the current United Nations Security Council (UNSC) President, Gabon Ambassador Michel Biang, calling for a UN secretariat probe into reports that Russia has used Iranian-made drones (UAVs, unmanned aerial vehicles) in the Ukraine war.

Both the E3 and the United States have argued that any such supply would breach UNSC Resolution 2231, which endorsed the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement, the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action). “Open source reporting suggests that Iran intends to transfer yet more UAVs and, potentially, ballistic missiles to Russia… a significant escalation,” the letter read.

While drones used by Russia have played a minor role in the war, their deployment against civilian targets has been highlighted by Ukraine in its call for greater military support from the US and EU, while the US has argued that Iran could supply other hardware. Washington and EU supplies of weapons to Ukraine of over $20 billion has enabled Ukraine to push back against Russia’s invasion.

Friday’s joint press conference in Washington with Secretary of State Antony Blinken and French foreign minister Catherine Colonna confirmed the Ukraine crisis bringing Washington and the E3 closer together. With Germany generally taking a more cautious line against Russia and Britain facing another domestic leadership contest, France is taking a more prominent role.

The E3 letter could be a first step to moving ‘snapback’ sanctions on Iran, a provision of the JCPOA. The E3 have accepted the US cannot do this as it left the JCPOA in 2018 and imposed ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions on Iran in violation of the 2015 agreement.

But the procedures, more so the consequences, of such a move are unclear. Firstly, the argument that Iran supplying drones to Russia violates the JCPOA rests on a clause in Resolution 2231, and linked US letter to the UNSC, that was primarily intended to restrict types of arms going into, rather than out of, Iran. Such transfers, the resolution says, require UNSC approval.

Secondly, Iran has already argued its expansion since 2019 of its nuclear program beyond JCPOA limits does not violate the agreement because of a provision that any violation of the agreement by other parties – for example by the US imposing ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions in 2018 – would constitute “grounds [for Iran] to cease performing its commitments under the JCPOA.” The same argument could be made over drones.

The ‘snapback’ procedure

If the E3 does move for snapback, the procedure outlined in the JCPOA gives a 30-day period for any JCPOA signatory to move a resolution opposing the re-introduction of international sanctions. This, presumably, could be vetoed by France or Germany, bringing the sanctions back into effect but with Russia and China refusing to accept them, perhaps citing as a precedent the US breaking USNC 2231 in 2018.

Given Europe’s trade with Iran has fallen dramatically under US ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions – which threaten punitive US action again any third party dealing with Iran – renewed European sanctions would have little economic impact.

Some analysts also argue a debate highlighting violations of UN resolution would alienate countries like India and China already uneasy with the US and EU approach to the Ukraine crisis, thereby deepening ties within an ‘Asian bloc’ led by Moscow and Beijing.

Blinken said Friday that the US remained committed to revive the JCPOA, an effort he distinguished from “Iran’s activities, Iran's aggression, whether it’s in the Middle East or beyond.” But is its widely suggested that any escalation through the UN, by the US or the E3, would doom efforts to restore the 2015 agreement. Colonna said at Friday’s press conference that France and the US were “pretty much aligned” on Iran.

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US Lawmaker Introduces Bill To Sanction Iran Leader, President

Oct 22, 2022, 11:12 GMT+1
•
Iran International Newsroom

A bill proposed by a US Republican lawmaker, dubbed the Mahsa Amini Act, would impose sanctions on Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and President Ebrahim Raisi.

The bill which would “impose sanctions on the supreme leader of Iran and the president of Iran and their respective offices for human rights abuses and support for terrorism.”

The Mahsa Amini Act, named after the 22-year-old woman who was killed in the custody of Iran’s hijab police, would block the assets of all officials of the Islamic Republic, including Khamenei and Raisi who can be considered the main decision makers in human rights abuses.

Such legislation would have a symbolic impact on the Iranian leaders, but any additional sanctions would mean further isolation for the Islamic Republic and make it harder for the Biden Administration to make a new nuclear deal with Tehran.

“The supreme leader holds ultimate authority over Iran’s judiciary and security apparatus, including the Ministry of Intelligence and Security, law enforcement forces under the Interior Ministry, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), and the Basij, a nationwide volunteer paramilitary group subordinate to the IRGC, all of which have engaged in human rights abuses in Iran,” states the legislation.

The bill further says that “the IRGC, a United States designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, which reports to the supreme leader, continues to perpetrate terrorism around the globe, including attempts to kill and kidnap American citizens on United States soil.”

It also expresses “the sense of Congress that the United States shall stand with and support the people of Iran in their demand for fundamental human rights.”

Congressional sources told the Washington Free Beacon that the bill was presented to the offices of every Democratic member of the House of Representatives, but none of them supported the plan.

Claudia Tenney the Republican lawmaker says Congress must not lose the chance to help protesters by increasing sanctions on the Iranian regime.

“The Iranian regime’s heartless murder of Mahsa Amini once again exposed the reality that Iran’s government abuses and subjugates women,” said Tenney adding that “the brutal crackdown on protesters has shown their disdain for basic human rights and underscores the need for a more permanent sanctions regime against the Iranian government.”

Likewise, Republican Michael Waltz, who is one of the coauthors of the bill, says “We’re nearly two years into the Biden administration and it’s clear their appeasement policy towards Iran isn’t working.”

“The Iran regime continues to export terrorism, repress its people, directly aid Russia in its invasion of Ukraine, and is closer to a nuclear weapon than ever before. We need to stand up for our national security and the people of Iran by reimposing crippling sanctions on the Iran Regime,” underlined Waltz.

The Biden Administration has taken several steps since the protests in Iran began in mid-September. It has issued sanctions against some officials and entities and has signaled that nuclear talks with Iran have been put on the backburner. But its lax enforcement of oil export sanctions since early 2021, has allowed China to import more Iranian crude, which has somewhat boosted the regime’s income.

According to the Oslo-based NGO Iran Human Rights Organization at least 215 people, including 27 children have been killed with excessive and lethal force throughout Iran during the current antigovernment protests.

EU, UK Sanction Iranian Generals Over ‘Drones Used By Russia’

Oct 20, 2022, 21:45 GMT+1
•
Iran International Newsroom

The European Union and the United Kingdom Thursday sanctioned three Iranian military commanders and a defense company over allegedly supplying drones to Russia.

The decisions introduce travel bans and asset freezes on Major-General Mohammad Hossein Bagheri, chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces, General Seyed Hojjatollah Qureishi, a senior defense official, and Brigadier-General Saeed Aghajani, the head of “UAV command” (unmanned aerial vehicle) in the Revolutionary Guards Aerospace Force. The sanctioned company Shahed Aviation Industries makes Shahed-136 drones.

An EU statement said Bagheri supervised Iran’s drone program, played a “fundamental role in Iran’s defence cooperation” with Russia, including supplying Mohajer-6 drones “for their use in the war of aggression against Ukraine.” Qureishi, the statement said, headed logistics at the Ministry of Defense and had negotiated with Russia over drone supply, while Aghajani headed “the backbone” of Iran’s drone program.

Major-General Mohammad Hossein Bagheri, chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces
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Major-General Mohammad Hossein Bagheri, chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces

A statement from British foreign secretary James Cleverly said the UK was acting against “those who have supplied the drones used by Russia to target Ukrainian civilians and that there was “clear evidence of Iran’s destabilising role in global security.” The British foreign office said the three individuals were “personally responsible” for providing drones used by Russia in Ukraine.

The EU decisions follows discussions going on since a foreign ministers meeting Monday. Arriving in Luxemburg for that gathering, Josep Borrell, the EU foreign policy chief, had said Europe was seeking “concrete evidence” that Russia had used Shahed-136 drones in recent weeks.

A CNN correspondent tweeted Tuesday that the network had been given “exclusive access to an Iranian-made Mohajer-6 drone, shot down a few weeks ago by Ukrainian forces in Southern Ukraine.” The drone, with the marking ER-860, appeared in excellent condition.

‘Dangerous new phase’

The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that US and European sanctions against Iran would complement additional military aid to Ukraine. The Journal cited “officials,” presumably American, suggesting Russia’s use of drones “takes the war in Ukraine into a dangerous new phase.”

Photo of an electronic part said to belong to an Iranian drone after it was shot down by Ukraine on Oct. 6, 2022
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Photo of an electronic part said to belong to an Iranian drone after it was shot down by Ukraine on Oct. 6, 2022

The US has sent Ukraine over $17 billion in aid, mainly in weapons, and the EU this week added $500 million to the $2.5 billion already sent in military supplies. Washington, which is so far denying Ukraine more advanced weapons so as to avoid escalation, says it wants to degrade Russian capacity as its diminishing stocks of Cruise and other missiles, which have inflicted far more damage than drones, which carry less explosives and are relatively easy to shoot down. Both the US and Turkey have supplied Ukraine with drones.

Iran has developed its drone program due to its lack of an effective air-force given international sanctions. The Shahed-129, an earlier version, may have been a copy of the Hermes 450, a drone made by Israel, which along with Turkey leads Middle East drone production.

US will ‘surge security assistance’

A US statement Wednesday said it had raised, alongside France and the UK, the alleged drone transfer at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). The statement said Washington would “continue to surge unprecedented security assistance to Ukraine” and reiterated the claim, made also by European officials, that any Iranian supply of drones would violate UNSC Resolution 2231, passed in 2015 to endorse the Iranian nuclear agreement, the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action). The US said this week that Iran had also supplied drones to Ethiopia in 2021.

Ukraine’s ambassador to the UN Sergiy Kyslytsya claimed Wednesday that Iranian drones allegedly used by Russia “meet the parameters” of UNSC Resolution 2231 “because they are capable of a range of equal to or greater than 300 kilometers (186 miles).” However, there is no mention of drones in the resolution, and its restrictions on Iran lasting to October 2023 refer only to “any activity related to ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons…”

The US in September sanctioned several Iranian companies it said were involved in producing drones supplied to Russia, but it was unclear how the measures would add in practice to existing US ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions, which have since Washington left the JCPOA in 2018 threatened punitive action against any entity worldwide dealing with Iran.

Canada Adds To Iran Sanctions Over Propaganda, Torture

Oct 20, 2022, 11:19 GMT+1

Canada is imposing more punitive measures on Iranian officials and entities linked to the regime’s propaganda machine and those behind the Islamic Republic’s torture of detainees.

Ottawa’s new set of sanctions target six people and four entities, including the Fars News Agency that is affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard (IRGC), and the Guardian Council, which blocks electoral candidates who are not subservient to the regime. 

The list also includes the Assembly of Experts – the body empowered to appoint the Supreme Leader of Iran -- and the Expediency Discernment Council, whose power lies in its advisory role to the Supreme Leader who chooses its members every five years. 

Canada is also listing Iran’s deputy interior minister and a commander of the Revolutionary Guard for their roles in the violent crackdowns on protesters.

With the new additions, Canada has sanctioned 89 Iranian individuals and 177 entities. 

On October 13, Ottawa imposed sanctions against 17 Iranian individuals and three entities that have participated in or enabled gross human rights violations. Former Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif was in the new list as well as former prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi, Khamenei's representative in Kayhan Hossein Shariatmadari, former president Hassan Rouhani's defense minister Amir Hatami, the current state broadcaster chief Peyman Jebelli and former parliament speaker Ali Larijani.

Earlier in October, Canada finally announced sanctions against IRGC, permanently banning over 10,000 of its officers from entering Canada.

International reactions to Iran’s crackdown on ongoing popular protests are growing, with more and more countries condemning Tehran’s behavior, summoning envoys, or adopting resolutions.


EU To Sanction 8 Iranians, Entities Over Drone Supply To Russia

Oct 19, 2022, 16:28 GMT+1

European Union governments have provisionally agreed to impose sanctions on eight people and entities over Iran’s supply of drones to Russian to be used against Ukraine.

Three diplomats said that sanctions experts from the 27 EU members agreed to the list in a meeting on Wednesday. It will be further discussed by national ambassadors at a meeting scheduled for later in the day.

EU governments have until Thursday morning to decide whether to approve the sanctions, the goal being to agree the package before leaders convene in Brussels for a summit starting later in the day.

Ukraine has reported a spate of Russian attacks using Iranian-made Shahed-136 drones in recent weeks, while Tehran and Kremlin deny the supply of drones to Russia.

A European Commission spokesperson said there was consensus on foreign ministers meeting in Luxembourg October 17, that the EU should react swiftly. "Now that we have gathered our own sufficient evidence, work is ongoing in the Council with view to a clear, swift and firm response," the spokesperson told the EU's executive's daily news conference.

In addition to supplying drones, Iran has promised to send its own Fateh-110 and Zolfaghar surface-to-surface missiles to Russia for strikes on Ukrainian cities and troops. A deal was agreed on October 6 when Iran's First Vice President Mohammad Mokhber, two senior officials from Iran's Revolutionary Guards and an official from the Supreme National Security Council visited Moscow for talks with Russia about weapons deliveries.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian announced on Wednesday that four institutions and 15 foreign officials that had a hand in the sanctions against the Islamic Republic would be added to the country’s blocklist.

Iran Needs $80 Billion To Solve Natural Gas Shortage: Minister

Oct 18, 2022, 12:28 GMT+1
•
Iran International Newsroom

Iran’s Oil Minister Javad Owji says the Islamic Republic needs some $80 billion in domestic and foreign investment to avoid natural gas shortage in winters.

On Tuesday Owji once again warned that the country would face a 200-million cubic meter daily shortage of natural gas this winter.

Speaking at a parliament session he said this amount is needed “in upstream and downstream to resolve the issue within the next three to four years,” something which is impossible due to lack of foreign investment.

Iran needs to develop its oil and gas sectors by technology from Western energy giants to boost production which is gradually falling. For instance, as natural pressure in the South Pars gas fields is dropping Tehran needs billions of either partnership deals or cash investments to build larger platforms to extract more gas.

More than 70 percent of Iran’s energy is supplied by natural gas and the South Pars field is responsible to provide around 75 percent of this amount, reiterated the oil minister underlining that the lack of investment to develop gas fields is the main cause of this shortage.

It was interesting to observe that Iranian officials and government-controlled media were claiming in August and September that as winter approaches in Europe, the West will need Iran's energy and might make more concessions in the nuclear talks.

Not only the oil minister but a host of other officials and local experts constantly highlight the need for foreign investments, but they have no say in the country’s foreign policy, which is the exclusive domain of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Director of Tehran Chamber of Commerce Investment Services says foreign investors are reluctant to enter a country in which even domestic investors cannot work and capital outflow is on the rise.

Speaking to ILNA News Agency, Faryal Mostofi said on Tuesday that apart from Western sanctions, lack of security in investment and economic freedoms in Iran have also dissipated investors’ enthusiasm to release funds, stating that Iran could become a suitable place for foreign investors if conditions were right.

Summarizing the reasons for the crisis, Mostofi added that “inflation, sanctions, mismanagement, corruption, and strict regulations” have forced even Iranians to invest their capitals in housing sector in countries like Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.

According to her, something between $30 to $100 billion capital has left Iran in the past ten years due to inability of government to control inflation, while countries like Afghanistan and Iraq have been able to fix it below five percent.

Since the Islamic Republic was established in 1979 Iran’s rate of growth has been relatively low averaging less than 3 percent per year, this comes as experts say it needs around six percent annual growth to solve its endemic unemployment problem.

It is not just the nuclear dispute and its resulting sanctions that prevent the involvement of Western firms, it is also Iran’s overall foreign policy as an anti-West ‘revolutionary’ state, with an unpredictable behavior and a closed economy.

Iran has the second largest natural gas reserves in the world, holding more than 17 percent of global discovered gas fields. However, without foreign investment and technology, it will become a natural gas importer while the US sanctions would not allow Western companies to have any business dealings with the country.