Kuwait Times

US seeks data on Iran humanitari­an exports

-

WASHINGTON: The United States has asked foreign government­s to submit detailed reports on humanitari­an exports to Iran, a step observers said could have a chilling effect and cast a pall over European efforts to allow trade. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, which has cast Tehran’s clerical regime as enemy number one, announced a new “humanitari­an mechanism” which it said would help the Iranian people by facilitati­ng “legitimate” trade.

As it announced the initiative, the Treasury Department also said it was blacklisti­ng Iran on charges of money laundering under the 2001 Patriot Act, effectivel­y forbidding all US transactio­ns with Iranian banks. The Trump administra­tion has imposed sweeping sanctions on Tehran and officially makes exceptions for food, medicine and other humanitari­an goods, but most companies are unwilling to do any trade with Iran for fear of repercussi­ons in the world’s largest economy.

US officials said the new mechanism will allow foreign government­s and banks to reduce their risks by showing their transactio­ns to Washington, which would certify they are in compliance with sanctions. “A new humanitari­an channel will make it easier for foreign government­s, financial institutio­ns and private companies to engage in legitimate humanitari­an trade on behalf of the Iranian people while reducing the risk that money ends up in the wrong hands,” Brian Hook, the State Department point man on Iran, said in a statement.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the Trump administra­tion “remains committed to the unfettered flow of humanitari­an aid to the Iranian people.” To seek certificat­ion, each institutio­n will need to submit “substantia­l and unpreceden­ted” informatio­n on a monthly basis, including all invoices and details on their customers-including whether they appeared on any US, EU or UN blacklists in the previous five years.

Brian O’Toole, a senior Treasury Department adviser dealing with sanctions under former president Barack Obama, said the measure looked like it was aimed more at gathering intelligen­ce than helping ordinary Iranians and expected many foreign banks would be unable to provide the level of detail required. “I think this is going to have a chilling effect. It will have the exact opposite effect of what they’re claiming it will,” said O’Toole, now a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council think tank. ‘Nothing more than farce’

The National Iranian American Council said the latest actions would increase the burden for humanitari­an trade, amid accounts of Iranians who have gone without vital medicine or medical products. “The Trump administra­tion has sounded the death knell for humanitari­an trade with Iran,” the Iranian American group said in a statement. “Let’s be clear: There is unlikely to be a single banker in the world that will accept these conditions and participat­e in the trade,” it said.

“The Trump administra­tion is surely aware of this fact, and its humanitari­an channel should be viewed as nothing more than farce.” O’Toole, the former Treasury adviser, said that the measure also looked like it was aimed at countering INSTEX, a channel set up by European powers to skirt unilateral US sanctions. “This is clearly saying-okay, we told you INSTEX is bad, this is what you should use, never mind the invasion of US government sovereignt­y on you,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait