Iran vows to bypass US sanctions
• President says country is in an economic war situation
A defiant Iran says that it will “proudly bypass” sanctions by the US that took effect on Monday targeting the Islamic republic’s oil and financial sectors.
A defiant Iran says that it will “proudly bypass” sanctions by the US that took effect on Monday targeting the Islamic republic’s oil and financial sectors.
The measures, described by Washington as “the toughest sanctions ever”, come six months after US President Donald Trump’s decision to abandon the multinational nuclear deal with Tehran.
“I announce that we will proudly bypass your illegal, unjust sanctions because it’s against international regulations,” Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said in a televised speech. “We are in a situation of economic war, confronting a bullying power. I don’t think that in the history of America, someone has entered the White House who is so against law and international conventions.”
In one of Tehran’s bazaars there was anxiety over the future. “The shadow of the sanctions has already affected the economy in a disastrous way, people’s purchasing power has plunged,” said Ehsan Attar in his herbal remedy shop.
Trump has made Iran a foreign policy priority since taking office, accusing it of spreading terror and seeking to destabilise the Middle East. He detested the nuclear pact forged by his predecessor, Barack Obama, and five other world powers, finally deciding to abandon it in May.
Trump says he wants a new deal that curbs Iran’s missile programme and interventions in the Middle East demands that have been rejected by Tehran.
“Constantly they are sending us messages saying ‘let’s sit and negotiate.’ Negotiations for what?” said Rouhani.
“First, you respect the negotiations we already concluded, so that there are grounds for the next negotiations.”
Rouhani said four countries approached him during his visit to New York for the UN General Assembly in September, offering to mediate with the US but he turned them down. “There is no need for mediation. There is no need for all these messages. Act on your commitments, and we will sit and talk,” he said.
The latest tranche of US sanctions aims to significantly cut Iran’s oil exports — which have already fallen by up to 1million barrels a day since May
— and cut off its banks from international finance.
Although the US has given temporary exemptions to eight countries — including India, Japan and Turkey — to continue buying oil, it aims to push Iran’s sales to zero. “Watch what we do. Watch as we’ve already taken more crude oil off the market than any time in previous history,” US secretary of state Mike Pompeo said.
The other parties to the nuclear deal — Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia — have vehemently opposed the US move and vowed to keep alive the accord, technically known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. “We will do everything necessary in the interests of preserving and expanding trade, economic and financial co-operation with Iran despite US sanctions,” said Russia’s foreign ministry.
Iran foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif tweeted that “US bullying is backfiring, not just because the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action is important, but because the world can’t allow Trump & Co to destroy global order.”
The only support for the US position has come from Saudi Arabia and Israel, with the latter saying sanctions are “the seachange the Middle East has been waiting for”.