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Clash over rehabilitated oil tycoon underscores Iran's post-war tensions

Sep 3, 2025, 19:15 GMT+1Updated: 01:38 GMT+0
Iranian tycoon Babak Zanjani
Iranian tycoon Babak Zanjani

Iran’s judiciary has forcefully defended a disgraced oil tycoon from accusations by the central bank that he had not paid back his debts after he was convicted in one of the country's biggest ever corruption cases.

The clash over Babak Zanjani, whom Iranian media outlets say Tehran has recruited back into business as new sanctions loom, appears to indicate policy divisions among key institutions as the country reels from a damaging war in June.

Judiciary spokesman Asghar Jahangir on Wednesday rejected a statement last month by the central bank's governor saying Zanjani had only repaid about $15 million of a total $1.9 billion in oil revenue he was convicted of embezzling.

“At a time when the country needs calm, the judiciary cautioned central bank governor Mohammadreza Farzin to avoid comments that could disturb public opinion,” Jahangir added. The matter “rests solely with the courts," he said.

Zanjani's original 2016 conviction on fraud and money laundering charges earned him a death sentence, which was commuted to a 20-year prison term last year by Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. He was released in April.

A wily evader of Western sanctions on Iran, Zanjani was widely reviled by many Iranians struggling in straitened economic circumstances but prized by officialdom for his craft in securing oil exports, the main source of state revenue.

“The defendant served his sentence without a single day’s leave until the introduction of his assets, which were even greater in value than the debt,” Jahangir said. “Claims that these assets were not returned have no valid legal basis.”

From air fresheners to oil billions

Babak Zanjani, born in 1951, was the prime defendant in one of Iran’s biggest corruption cases. He once said that during his military service he was the driver of the central bank governor and used the connection to trade hard currency—an account the bank has denied.

What is clear is that he developed ties with the Revolutionary Guards’ Khatam al-Anbia engineering arm through Ahmad Vahid Dastjerdi, then head of the IRGC cooperative foundation.

Babak Zanjani in front of a plane belonging to Qeshm Air, the airline he used to own before being jailed
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Babak Zanjani in front of a plane belonging to Qeshm Air, the airline he used to own before being jailed

Before that, Zanjani had worked in small businesses, from producing air fresheners on Kish Island to selling sheep hides abroad. His fortunes changed in 2007 when he began supplying parts for IRGC projects.

In 2010, Zanjani became a crucial oil broker under Oil Minister Rostam Ghasemi. He acquired Malaysia’s First Islamic Investment Bank to channel oil revenues and built a network of exchanges in the United Arab Emirates and Tajikistan.

A 2012 decree signed by three ministers and the central bank governor allowed 14.5 percent of oil revenues to flow into his bank—a key focus of his eventual indictment.

In the last year and a half of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s presidency, Zanjani not only took delivery of crude shipments offshore but also received that 14.5 percent of oil sales directly, leaving him with a large debt to the oil ministry.

At the same time, his Sorinet holding bought domestic carrier Qeshm Air, extending his empire into aviation.

Fall and rise

Only months before his downfall, Zanjani called himself an “economic Basij member,” a reference to a domestic enforcement militia loyal to the Islamic authorities.

In 2013, after disputes with then-President Hassan Rouhani's government, he was arrested. In March 2016 judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Mohseni Eje’i announced that Zanjani and two associates had been convicted as so-called corruptors on earth and sentenced to death.

The Supreme Court upheld the ruling but allowed clemency if he returned the funds.

Babak Zanjani in a court session
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Babak Zanjani in a court session

“As the assets were returned and the debt was settled, the Supreme Leader granted clemency, reducing his sentence to 20 years,” his lawyer said in April 2024. He was released in December 2024.

Reports this year suggested Zanjani had resumed business activities, including launching an airline called Dot-One with 32 aircraft, as well as ventures in ride-hailing, shipping and rail imports.

In May, an $800 million contract between the transport ministry and a company linked to him marked his apparent full rehabilitation, sparking controversy.

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Tehran’s denial after wartime thrashing may deepen its peril

Sep 3, 2025, 17:24 GMT+1
•
Roozbeh Mirebrahimi

New lows once unthinkable in Iran—from assassinations of senior officials to the gutting of air defenses—have already been plumbed, yet Tehran’s rulers remain impervious to these new realities, inviting the prospect of an even harsher reckoning.

The first decisive break came with the 2019 assassination of General Qassem Soleimani, the commander who embodied Iran’s regional network of armed allies and whose elimination was once considered beyond the realm of possibility.

For years, Soleimani symbolized Iran’s ability to project influence across the Middle East. Western policymakers and Israeli officials acknowledged his central role in destabilizing the region, but the notion of his actually being killed was long dismissed as outlandish.

Memoirs and statements from American and Israeli officials confirm he was repeatedly in their crosshairs until January 2020, when President Donald Trump ordered a drone strike on his convoy in Baghdad.

The attack, initially conceived as a joint mission with Israel before it withdrew at the last moment, shattered the regime’s myth of its own invincibility.

Arms broken

Soleimani’s death not only removed Iran’s most visible strategist but also disrupted the command structure of its allied armed groups—damage that remains unrepaired.

If Soleimani’s killing marked the first taboo broken, the next was direct military action on Iranian soil.

For decades, the idea of such strikes lingered at the margins of debate. It was occasionally invoked as a deterrent but rarely treated as feasible.

That barrier has now fallen.

Israeli and American precision airstrikes and even temporary control of Iranian airspace have made operations inside Iran a lived reality.

The bombing of sites deep within the country shows that thresholds once thought inviolable have already been crossed.

Head in the sand

In today’s climate, where the targeting of senior officials has become normalized and attacks on Iranian territory draw limited diplomatic shock, Tehran continues to pursue demands increasingly out of step with global realities.

The Islamic Republic’s insistence on uranium enrichment and nuclear advances, after years of secrecy and deception, has lost its leverage.

None of the old deterrents carry weight: not threats to close strategic straits, not promises of “harsh revenge,” not missile parades or military drills.

What once projected strength now reads as ritual.

By denying the scale of these shifts and clinging to exhausted strategies, Iran’s leaders only accelerate the erosion of their position.

What was once taboo—strikes on leaders, attacks on Iranian territory—is now well-trod precedent, and Tehran’s refusal to confront these realities may only hasten its own undoing.

Mixed signals on new nuclear talks suggest rifts in Tehran

Sep 2, 2025, 21:51 GMT+1
•
Maryam Sinaiee

A senior cleric’s claim that Iran’s Supreme Leader endorsed new indirect talks with Washington has raised questions about divisions in Tehran, after Ali Khamenei himself appeared to rule out negotiations in a recent speech.

“The principle of negotiation, even in an indirect form with the United States, was endorsed by the Leader after the war,” said Abdolhossein Khosropanah, Secretary of the Supreme Council of the Cultural Revolution.

Days earlier, on August 24, Khamenei had struck a very different tone, eschewing talks and accusing Washington of seeking Iran’s “surrender.”

The veteran theocrat called the standoff over Tehran's nuclear program “unsolvable” and vowed the Islamic Republic would never bow to US pressure.

Khosropanah’s apparently conflicting citation surprised many. “Why would an official from a cultural body comment on national security?” analyst Damoon Mohammadi told Iran International.

Khamenei, he suggested, may have deliberately floated the idea through an unlikely figure to test domestic reaction.

The contrasting statements underscore intensifying infighting over Iran’s future course.

With the stakes raised by the 12-day war with Israel and the looming prospect of UN sanctions snapping back, Tehran’s factions are split between those urging pragmatic engagement and hardliners who insist any compromise would mean capitulation.

Moderates push diplomacy

President Masoud Pezeshkian has hinted at cautious engagement, despite heavy criticism at home.

Meeting Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in China, he said Iran was ready for indirect dialogue with Washington so long as its nuclear rights were recognized.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei echoed that line, saying Tehran would reinstate IAEA inspections and reduce enrichment to 3.67% if its sovereign right to enrichment were respected.

Hardliners resist

Former negotiator Saeed Jalili remains fiercely opposed, likening pro-diplomacy figures in early August to the Israelites who worshipped the golden calf in Moses’ absence—a possible jab at officials emboldened by Khamenei’s limited public appearances since the war.

Ultra-conservative commentator Mohammadsadegh Shahbazi wrote on X: “There are options beyond negotiation. International structures can be challenged. We must show that Europe and America are not our only paths.”

Washington unmoved

Despite the rhetoric, officials acknowledge Washington has shown no interest in talks. Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-Ravanchi told Iranian media managers in a closed-door meeting Saturday—according to information obtained by Iran International—that the White House had ignored Tehran’s outreach.

Another deputy, Kazem Gharibabadi, reportedly disclosed last week: “We have sent messages to Washington 15 times in different ways to restart the negotiations, but we have not received any response.”

The last round, mediated by Oman, collapsed when the US demanded Iran curb enrichment on its own soil—a demand Khamenei branded a red line. With diplomacy stalled, Israel struck Iranian sites, triggering the 12-day war.

Iran security council move shines faint light on post-Khamenei future

Sep 2, 2025, 15:28 GMT+1
•
Behrouz Turani

Iran’s new security chief Ali Larijani has appointed a longtime rival as his deputy at the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC), in a sign of potential shifting power dynamics at the apex of power at a delicate moment.

The August 31 appointment of Ali Bagheri Kani carries implications for factional rivalries, the role of Iran’s powerful clerical families and the looming question of succession to supreme leader Ali Khamenei.

Some observers, including former parliament security committee chair Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh, see the decision as an effort to placate hardliners—a view echoed by the conservative outlet Nameh News.

Others, such as commentators on Khabar Online, a platform close to Larijani, argue it reflects a coordinated bid by influential clerical clans to consolidate power.

Both outlets avoided linking the maneuver to 86-year-old Khamenei’s eventual exit, though many analysts consider succession the unavoidable backdrop.

‘A silent figure’

Bagheri Kani is best remembered as deputy to ultraconservative Saeed Jalili at the SNSC in the late 2000s, when the pair became known for their hardline stance in nuclear talks.

US negotiator William Burns, in his book The Back Channel: American Diplomacy in a Disordered World, described Jalili as a battle-scarred ideologue who had “learned the hard way in the trenches (of the Iran-Iraq war) that Iran could trust no one.”

Bagheri, Burns recalled, was “a silent figure” — a presence, but not yet a voice. The duo took over nuclear talks after Larijani stepped down following disputes with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s administration.

Now Larijani, Bagheri and Jalili must work together again, as Jalili also sits on the SNSC as Khamenei’s representative.

Tensions are already evident: last week, hardliners in the Majles pressed Larijani to explain why he ignored legislation demanding Iran’s withdrawal from the Non-Proliferation Treaty.

Revolutionary or not?

Bagheri himself has shown signs of shifting.

In 2024, the hardline daily Sobh-e Now noted that he had grown critical of those “disguised as defenders of revolutionary values” who cast negotiations as betrayal.

Etemad Daily highlighted the contrast with Jalili, citing Khamenei’s rebuke of Jalili for holding unauthorized bilateral talks with Burns.

Bagheri, by contrast, said he would never conduct technical negotiations with US experts but still defended diplomacy as a vital tool: “Those who attack negotiations as counter-revolutionary behavior wish to rob the Islamic Republic of negotiations as an effective tool. Politics is the arena of beliefs, rationality and intelligence.”

Criticism from the hardline Paydari Party's deputies has reinforced the perception that Bagheri has moved away from his earlier ultraconservative line.

His remarks on Europe also suggested pragmatism: “The potentials of the East do not mean we should ignore other potentials. Europe has never been on our blacklist. We will welcome their cooperation as much as they wish to play a role in Iran’s development.”

Establishment and succession

The appointment also underscores the weight of Iran’s clerical dynasties.

Bagheri is part of the powerful Kani clan, son of former Expediency Council member Mohammad Bagher Bagheri Kani, with a brother married into Khamenei’s family.

Larijani, meanwhile, belongs to another dynasty: the sons of the late Ayatollah Mirza Hashem Larijani, with brothers tied by marriage to Grand Ayatollah Vahid Khorasani and Ayatollah Morteza Motahari.

These families, wealthy and deeply embedded in clerical life, form a dominant bloc within the Islamic Republic.

Against this backdrop, Larijani’s choice to elevate Bagheri looks less like conciliation and more like strategic positioning in a system bracing for transition.

With succession looming and clerical clans maneuvering for influence, even a deputy appointment at the SNSC reverberates beyond the bureaucracy—into the struggle over who will shape the post-Khamenei order.

Bogus barrels: how Iran exploits Iraq’s name to move its oil

Sep 1, 2025, 19:52 GMT+1
•
Dalga Khatinoglu

Iran is passing off its crude oil as Iraqi exports to evade US sanctions, according to new evidence that contradicts Baghdad’s denials.

Iraq’s national oil marketer, SOMO, rejected any involvement when the United States sanctioned an Iraqi businessman in July for allegedly profiting from smuggling Iranian oil disguised as Iraqi crude.

But customs data from China appears to point to a different reality.

For two consecutive years, Chinese records show imports of “Iraqi” oil exceeding Iraq’s declared shipments by around 100,000 barrels per day—worth more than $2.5 billion annually.

The gap has grown since 2021, suggesting a persistent pattern of disguised flows.

Spoofing, going dark

Tanker-tracking companies confirm that Iran uses a mix of tactics to conceal the true origin of its shipments. These include forged bills of lading and manipulation of AIS (automatic identification system) data, which allow vessels to broadcast false positions.

Some tankers simulate loading near Oman’s Sohar port, though the crude is actually taken on in Iranian waters. Similar tricks have enabled Iranian oil to reach China under the cover of Iraqi or Omani documentation.

“Iranian oil does reach China as ‘Iraqi’ oil in large volumes given the bogus SOMO documentation, but we’ve also seen the same with ‘Omani’ oil because of the spoofing off Sohar,” said TankerTrackers, a shipping intelligence company.

Kpler, another data firm, said very large crude carriers often “go dark” and later reappear, but rarely spoof Iraqi terminals directly.

For fuel oil, however, some spoofing to Iraq’s Al Basrah terminal has been observed—though only in small amounts.

Kpler estimates Iran exported about 245,000 barrels per day of fuel oil in 2024, worth nearly $6 billion. Almost half went to the United Arab Emirates, 22% to China, 10% to Malaysia and the rest to other East Asian states.

“Iran uses a number of tactics to evade sanctions, including forged bills of lading, which may lead many to believe they are transporting Iraqi oil when in fact it is Iranian,” Claire Jungman of Vortexa said.

Shifting political cost

These tactics keep Iran’s exports flowing, but they also export the political fallout.

By disguising shipments as Iraqi, Omani or Emirati, Tehran forces its neighbors to carry the political and reputational burden in Washington.

Iraq’s oil minister Hayyan Abdul-Ghani acknowledged earlier this year that Iranian tankers were using forged Iraqi documents and said the matter had been reported to the United States.

Meanwhile, nearly half of Iran’s exports to China are presented as Malaysian oil—an anomaly that has drawn US scrutiny of Kuala Lumpur.

In the first seven months of this year, Chinese customs data showed imports of 1.46 million barrels per day from Malaysia, even though Malaysia’s total production is only about one-third of that figure.

Enforcement challenge

The pattern highlights the difficulty the US and its allies face in enforcing sanctions.

Iran has developed a sophisticated playbook: falsifying documents, manipulating digital tracking systems and exploiting the names of neighboring states. Each maneuver allows Tehran to keep revenues flowing while leaving others to explain statistical discrepancies.

For Iraq, the reputational stakes are particularly high.

As Baghdad seeks deeper ties with Washington and international investors, being seen as a potential cover for Iranian smuggling undermines confidence in the transparency of its oil sector.

By exploiting its neighbors’ identities, Iran is eroding trust in the global energy system, where documentation and digital tracking are supposed to guarantee legitimacy.

Iran's Pezeshkian urges Shanghai Cooperation Organization to cut dollar reliance

Sep 1, 2025, 08:00 GMT+1

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian told a summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in Tianjin that members must expand trade in national currencies and strengthen financial mechanisms to withstand sanctions.

Addressing the gathering on Monday, Pezeshkian outlined a three-part proposal called the “Special Accounts and Settlements of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.”

The plan proposes to expand the use of national currencies in trade, develop shared digital systems including central bank digital currencies, and create a multilateral swap fund to support members facing sanctions or liquidity crises.

“This initiative will enhance economic resilience and turn the SCO into a model of a fair multipolar financial order,” he said.

He also urged the formation of a committee of foreign ministers to manage crises and respond quickly to violations of sovereignty.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian speaks during the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit 2025, in Tianjin, China, September 1, 2025.
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Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian speaks during the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit 2025, in Tianjin, China, September 1, 2025.

This was not the first time Pezeshkian stressed de-dollarization. At a BRICS meeting in Russia in 2024, he said the bloc was recognized for “challenging the dominance of the dollar” and promoting national currencies.

At that time, an image of a banknote bearing the BRICS emblem in the hands of Russian President Vladimir Putin at the organization’s summit in Tatarstan drew media attention and sparked discussion about the possibility of its members adopting a common currency.

In December 2024, before officially taking office as US President Donald Trump warned BRICS members that if they used any currency other than the US dollar, they would face a 100% tariff.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian speaks during the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit 2025, in Tianjin, China, September 1, 2025.
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Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian speaks during the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit 2025, in Tianjin, China, September 1, 2025.

Absent from leaders’ photo

A video released Sunday showed Pezeshkian missing from the customary group photo.

Iranian media said he arrived late, while his deputy for communications said the official summit was to begin the following day and the photo was taken during an informal banquet. Unofficial Iranian accounts said his absence was due to alcohol being served at the reception, an issue sensitive for Iranian officials.

Tehran is seen as banking on bilateral meetings during the summit, particularly with Russian President Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping, as it seeks to manage fallout from its nuclear dispute with the West.

Founded in 2001 by China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) initially focused on regional security and counterterrorism.

Over time, China and Russia have framed it as a counterweight to US and NATO influence. The SCO now has 10 full members—including India, Pakistan, Iran (since 2023), and Belarus (since 2024)—and its agenda has expanded to economic, political, and military cooperation.