Arab News

Iran’s banks find a home in Germany

- DR. MAJID RAFIZADEH

One of the first sets of sanctions the US reimposed on Iran following its 2018 withdrawal from the nuclear deal was linked to the regime’s banking system. The US Department of Treasury targeted 50 Iranian banks and their foreign and domestic subsidiari­es with the sanctions it announced in November 2018. This was its largest single-day action “targeting the Iranian regime’s abuse of Iran’s banking sector to fund its destabiliz­ing activities.” The Treasury added that the Iranian regime had funneled the equivalent of billions of dollars for the Quds Force through the banking sector. Despite this tough US stance, unfortunat­ely many of the sanctioned Iranian banks are still operating with impunity in Germany.

By allowing these Iranian banks to continue to do business, Berlin appears to be providing some German firms with the ability to do business with Iran. According to a report published last week by United Against Nuclear Iran, “Siemens, Volkswagen and the big multinatio­nals have pulled back due to US sanctions, but many of Germany’s 3.5 million small and medium-sized enterprise­s are still prepared to do business with Iran. And they still can. From Hamburg in the north to Munich in the south, (these) firms can obtain letters of credit, bank guarantees, insurance and all the other trade finance products they need from their Iranian facilitato­rs.”

One of the most crucial Iranian banks — and the largest bank owned by the Tehran regime — that is still in business in Hamburg is Bank Melli. When it comes to revenue, Melli ranks first in the country. But it has been implicated in several major covert and illicit activities across the globe.

Another major

Iranian bank that is still conducting business in Hamburg is Bank Sepah. It is also owned by the Iranian regime and has been sanctioned by the US Treasury Department due to its provision of “direct and extensive financial services” to Iran’s key ballistic missiles procuremen­t and developmen­t agencies.

Then there is the EuropeanIr­anian Handelsban­k (EIH), which has been linked to more than a billion dollars-worth of transactio­ns for the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps.

The Iranian regime has become masterful in its attempts to chart illicit paths and exploit other nations’ financial systems. For example, Bahraini Foreign Minister Khalid bin Ahmed Al-Khalifa in 2018 reported that the government had detected the Iranian-linked Future Bank was operating a covert corruption scheme in Bahrain. It was later revealed that Iran’s Bank Melli instructed Future Bank officials on what to do when routing money through the US in order to conceal its origins. The Iranian regime likely uses such illegal financial activities to skirt sanctions and sponsor terrorism, proxies, lobbyists and spies in other countries. Germany’s authoritie­s must put an end to the operations of the Iranian banks that are still conducting business in the country. Allowing Iranianown­ed banks to freely operate contribute­s to the regime’s terror activities and destructiv­e behavior across the region.

Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is an Iranian-American political scientist.

Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh

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