Albuquerque Journal

Trump faces complaints over new Iran sanctions

Hawks in Congress say they are too weak

- BY MATTHEW LEE AND SUSANNAH GEORGE

WASHINGTON — A battle is brewing between the Trump administra­tion and some of the president’s biggest supporters in Congress who are concerned that sanctions to be re-imposed on Iran early next month won’t be tough enough.

As President Donald Trump prepares to re-impose a second batch of Iran sanctions that had been eased under the 2015 nuclear deal, conservati­ve lawmakers and outside advisers have become worried that the administra­tion may break a promise to exert “maximum pressure” on Iran. They are angered by suggestion­s that measures to be announced Nov. 5 won’t include a provision cutting Iran off from a key component of the global financial system.

The self-described Iran hawks are concerned enough that they have drafted legislatio­n that would require the administra­tion to demand that Iran be suspended from the internatio­nal bank transfer system known as SWIFT.

“The president asked for maximum pressure, not semi-maximum pressure,” said Richard Goldberg, a former aide to a Republican senator and senior adviser to the Foundation for the Defense of Democracie­s, a group that supports punishing Iran with sanctions. “Maximum pressure includes disconnect­ing Iranian banks from SWIFT.”

Trump pledged Thursday to do whatever it takes to pressure Iran to halt what he refers to as its “malign conduct” such as nuclear and missile developmen­t and support for terrorism and groups that destabiliz­e the Middle East.

“On Nov. 5th, all U.S. sanctions against Iran lifted by the nuclear deal will be back in full force,” he told a gathering at the White House to commemorat­e the 35th anniversar­y of the 1983 attack on the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut, Lebanon, which is blamed on Iranian-backed extremists. “And they will be followed up with even more sanctions to address the full range of Iran’s malign conduct. We will not allow the world’s leading sponsor of terror to develop the world’s deadliest weapons. Will not happen.”

The Nov. 5 sanctions cover Iran’s banking and energy sectors and will reinstate penalties for countries and companies in Europe, Asia and elsewhere that do not halt Iranian oil imports. They could also include measures to force Iran out of SWIFT.

Despite Trump’s tough stance, the hawks are worried about recent comments from Treasury Secretary Stephen Mnuchin and his staff that suggest Iran will be able to stay connected to SWIFT. They are also concerned the administra­tion will back down on its stated zero-tolerance policy for Iranian oil purchases by granting waivers to certain countries and companies that do not fully stop buying it.

Iran deal supporters, like the other parties to the agreement, argue that pushing Iran out of SWIFT, the Belgium-based Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommun­ication, will lead to the creation of alternate mechanisms that could supplant it as the leading global institutio­n for financial institutio­ns to send and receive informatio­n about banking transactio­ns. They also say expulsion will make it harder for Iran to conduct transactio­ns, such as humanitari­an purchases, that will still be allowed after Nov. 5.

Allowing Iran to remain in SWIFT would make it easier for Tehran to import humanitari­an goods like medicine permitted under U.S. sanctions and “would help the United States make clear that its critique of Iran is directed at the regime, not the people of Iran,” said Elizabeth Rosenberg, a former Treasury official now with the Center for a New American Security. She added, though, that disconnect­ion would be a “fast track” to isolation.

The debate underscore­s the challenges the administra­tion faces as it tries to isolate Iran without the full backing of other world powers who remain supportive of the nuclear deal.

 ?? VAHID SALEMI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An exchange shop in downtown Tehran, Iran, displays rates for various currencies. Some in the U.S. Congress are concerned that sanctions to be re-imposed on Iran early next month won’t be tough enough.
VAHID SALEMI/ASSOCIATED PRESS An exchange shop in downtown Tehran, Iran, displays rates for various currencies. Some in the U.S. Congress are concerned that sanctions to be re-imposed on Iran early next month won’t be tough enough.

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