Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Move hits Iran’s use of child soldiers, U.S. says

- DEB RIECHMANN

WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department on Tuesday targeted a network of banks and businesses that provides financial support to a paramilita­ry force in Iran, which is accused of training and deploying child soldiers to fight with Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps.

The sanctions are part of the U.S. economic campaign to pressure Iran to radically alter its policies, including developing ballistic missiles, supporting regional militant groups and violating human rights.

The Treasury Department said the Bonyad Taavon Basij network is an example of how the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps and Iranian military forces have expanded economic involvemen­t in major industries and infiltrate­d seemingly legitimate businesses to fund terrorism and other malign activities.

“This vast network provides financial infrastruc­ture to the Basij’s efforts to recruit, train and indoctrina­te child soldiers who are coerced in- to combat under the [Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps]’s direction,” Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said in a statement. “The internatio­nal community must understand that business entangleme­nts with the Bonyad Taavon Basij network and [the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps] front companies have real world humanitari­an consequenc­es. This helps fuel the Iranian regime’s violent ambitions across the Middle East.”

The sanctions prohibit Americans from doing business with the network or its affiliates and freeze assets they have under U.S. jurisdicti­on.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has been steadily restoring sanctions on Iran since he withdrew from the 2015 nuclear accord in May. Iran has been grappling with an economic crisis in recent months, with its currency plunging to historic lows and sporadic protests breaking out. The first set of sanctions, which were eased under the terms of the nuclear deal negotiated by President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, was re-imposed in August. A second, more sweeping set of sanctions is set to be re-imposed in early November.

The sanctions target the business network — known in English as Basij Cooperativ­e Foundation — and the paramilita­ry group called the Basij Resistance Force. The paramilita­ry unit, formed after the 1979 Iranian revolution, is run by the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps and has branches in every province and city in Iran.

According to the Treasury Department, it indoctrina­tes schoolchil­dren and provides combat training to Iranian and Afghan refugee children as young as 12, who are sent to fight in Syria. In a press announceme­nt, the Treasury Department included a photograph of children in the resistance force using photos of former Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush for target practice.

In addition, the department also targeted several banks, investment companies and businesses affiliated with the financial network.

Iran has tried to downplay U.S. sanctions targeting the country’s vital oil and gas sector. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said the Nov. 4 sanctions will have no effect because “the U.S. has already done whatever it wanted to do.”

Hoping to avoid further internatio­nal sanctions, Iran’s parliament recently voted to join a global convention to cut off terror financing.

Parliament speaker Ali Larijani said 143 out of 268 lawmakers voted to join the “Combating the Financing of Terrorism.” The bill must be ratified by the Guardian Council, a constituti­onal authority, to become a law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States