The Jerusalem Post

Iran to get first Airbus within weeks

Tehran says any new US sanctions would be violation of pact

- • By TIM HEPHER

PARIS (Reuters) – Iran expects to get its first new jet within weeks under a multi-billion-dollar deal with Airbus for 100 planes, a senior official said Monday, as Tehran and Western firms race to reopen trade almost a year after sanctions were lifted.

The first of the Airbus jets should be delivered in mid-January, part of plans to buy or lease 200 planes to renew IranAir’s decaying fleet, against a backdrop of conservati­ve criticism in both Washington and Tehran of last year’s internatio­nal sanctions deal to allow such business.

Sanctions were lifted in January but were followed by months of regulatory delays, and Iran has only just finalized a deal to buy 80 jets from Airbus’s US rival Boeing.

“We have finalized negotiatio­ns with Airbus and any day we will be able to sign the deal in Tehran,” Deputy Roads and Urban Developmen­t Minister Asghar Fakhrieh Kashan said. “We are expecting some final clearances and expect to sign today or tomorrow.”

The first Airbus A321 could arrive before the January 20 inaugurati­on of US President-elect Donald Trump, who has opposed the deal to lift most sanctions on Iran in exchange for curbs on its nuclear activities, and well ahead of Iranian presidenti­al elections in May next year.

That could provide a boost to the government of President Hassan Rouhani and allow Airbus to find a home for some jets abandoned or deferred by other customers due to economic problems in South America and elsewhere, analysts say.

Airbus, which has revised up its forecasts for Iranian domestic demand, said it was still negotiatin­g the IranAir deal. The airline sees itself as a future rival to Gulf-based super-carriers due to its geographic­al position.

Initial plans to buy a dozen A380 superjumbo­s were dropped after criticism from Iranian hardliners. Kashan said the deal with Airbus will be split roughly equally between narrow-body jets including the A320 and A321 and wide-body jets including the A330 and A350.

Such deals are also under fire from US Republican­s.

President Barack Obama’s outgoing administra­tion has granted licenses to allow the sales, a step required by both Airbus and Boeing due to the use of US parts, but analysts say completing them depends in part on Washington’s new political climate.

Asked whether either deal could be derailed if Trump imposes new restrictio­ns on trade with Iran, Kashan said: “We are not concerned, although we should not ignore such a possibilit­y.

“The fact is that Mr. Trump may impose certain new sanctions, but we would consider that to be a violation of the JCPOA [nuclear accord], which explicitly provides for the possibilit­y for the purchase of aircraft and their sale by manufactur­ers.”

Kashan also dismissed suggestion­s by some Republican­s that Iran could misuse civil jetliners for military purposes such as ferrying arms and fighters to Syria or elsewhere.

“This has not been the case and will not be the case. These accusation­s are not based on reality and are propaganda against the Iranian society and people,” he said.

Still, doubts remain over financing due to uncertaint­y over Trump’s policy towards Iran and the reluctance by either Western or Iranian government­s to provide financial guarantees.

Most Western commercial banks remain unwilling to get involved, fearing fines or commercial problems in the United States if relations between Washington and Tehran deteriorat­e.

Iran has reached agreements with at least two foreign leasing firms to finance a total of 77 jets, including 42 from Airbus and 35 from Boeing, Kashan said.

 ?? (Fabian Bimmer/Reuters) ?? AN AIRBUS A321 with the Iranian flag and descriptio­n ‘The airline of the Islamic Republic of Iran’ is parked at the Airbus facility in Hamburg yesterday.
(Fabian Bimmer/Reuters) AN AIRBUS A321 with the Iranian flag and descriptio­n ‘The airline of the Islamic Republic of Iran’ is parked at the Airbus facility in Hamburg yesterday.

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