The National - News

REVOLUTION­ARY GUARD CRUCIAL TARGET IN TRUMP’S IRAN POLICY

Treasury department imposes sanctions intended to curb Tehran’s ability to sponsor terrorism

- TAIMUR KHAN

Wide-ranging new US sanctions targeting Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps show that countering the group will be a focal point of America’s new approach to Iran.

The sanctions were announced on Friday as Donald Trump directed Washington’s Iran policy towards confrontat­ion and containmen­t with his decertific­ation under US law of Iran’s compliance with the historic nuclear deal. The decision now forces the US congress to decide whether to snap back suspended sanctions.

No breaches of the deal by Iran have been found by US or other monitoring agencies, and the five other world powers that are signatorie­s are opposed to unilateral changes or a renegotiat­ion of the accord.

But the US president is set on using the decertific­ation to roll back his predecesso­r’s engagement with Tehran and will aggressive­ly attempt to counter its growing regional influence.

“The IRGC has played a central role to Iran becoming the world’s foremost state sponsor of terror. Iran’s pursuit of power comes at the cost of regional stability, and treasury will continue using its authoritie­s to disrupt the IRGC’s destructiv­e activities,” said US treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin.

US partners in the region, especially Gulf countries, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, maintained throughout the negotiatio­ns that led to the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action that they were far more concerned with Tehran’s destabilis­ing activities aimed at cementing control and influence across the Middle East. This included the IRGC’s training and support for proxy militias in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Bahrain and Yemen.

Iran’s non-nuclear ballistic missile programme – controlled by the IRGC – has also been a primary concern for GCC countries, and they were dismayed that it was not addressed in the JCPoA.

Trump administra­tion officials had said during the Iran policy review process in recent weeks that the IRGC would itself be declared a specially-designated terrorist organisati­on, putting it on par with Al Qaeda, ISIL and Hizbollah.

But the White House apparently heeded opposition to such a move by senior military and national security personnel, adding only additional sanctions for the IRGC’s support for its own Quds Force, which has already been designated as a terrorist organisati­on. The IRGC was also sanctioned for its support of Hizbollah, Hamas and the Taliban.

The US military probably has contacts with the IRGC due to the proximity of their operations against ISIL and indirectly co-ordinates with forces it backs in Iraq and Syria in the fight against the extremist group. Iranian officials said that those same Shiite militias would target vulnerable US forces in retaliatio­n for designatin­g the IRGC.

“If US officials commit this strategic mistake, Iran will surely reciprocat­e,” Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said last week. “The IRGC is an honour for our country and a guarantor of the defence of our homeland.”

The IRGC began during the 1979 revolution as a militia protecting the clerics who overthrew the Shah. Since then it has become the most powerful security force in Iran, supersedin­g the regular military services. It controls the ballistic missile programme that is Iran’s most strategic convention­al asset, as well as a maritime force operating in the Gulf separate from the Iranian navy. Its elite Quds Force operates across the region backing Shiite militias and militant groups, and was designated by the US as a terrorist entity a decade ago.

After the Iran-Iraq war, and over the past 15 years of internatio­nal sanctions that choked Iran’s private sector in particular, the IRGC has also come to play a dominant role across the country’s economy.

The former US administra­tion of Barack Obama thought the nuclear deal and greater engagement with Tehran’s elected leadership would strengthen moderates and gradually undermine the IRGC and other hardliners’ economic and social control.

The easing of sanctions and sharp increase in deals with European and Asian firms in Iran has spurred hopes in the country that private businesses may take a greater share of the economy, which the IRGC has opposed. Iranian president Hassan Rouhani in part campaigned on reducing IRGC’s role in the economy.

The new US sanctions appear intended to again increase the risk for European companies and banks to operate in Iran, where they may do business with IRGC-linked entities.

“We urge the private sector to recognise that the IRGC permeates much of the Iranian economy, and those who transact with IRGC-controlled companies do so at great risk,” Mr Mnuchin said.

Some analysts and proponents of the harder line on Iran said the new sanctions on the IRGC could significan­tly raise pressure on Iran, without the US scuttling the nuclear deal itself.

“The decertific­ation doesn’t necessaril­y lead to the reimposing of sanctions. This on the other hand, imposes actual sanctions on an entity that controls significan­t parts of the Iranian economy,” said Michael Horowitz, an analyst at Prime Source risk consultanc­y.

 ?? Reuters ?? Donald Trump on Friday showed intent to roll back US engagement with Iran
Reuters Donald Trump on Friday showed intent to roll back US engagement with Iran

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