Chicago Sun-Times

Secretary of State pick had interest in Iran deals in 2016

View could clash with GOP senators

- Oren Dorell @ orendorell USA TODAY

President- elect Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of State expressed interest in a 2016 interview as CEO of ExxonMobil about doing business with Iran if sanctions were lifted, a view that could put him at odds with Republican­s weighing his confirmati­on.

Rex Tillerson is scheduled to testify Wednesday at his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which includes members opposed to deals between U. S. companies and Iran. Such business ties are possible following the lifting of sanctions under the nuclear deal negotiated by Iran, the Obama administra­tion and five other world powers.

Last March, Tillerson told CNBC that his firm would consider doing business in oil- rich Iran if the opportunit­y arose.

While U. S. companies are still unable to conduct business there, a lot of European competitor­s can, Tillerson told the business cable channel. Investment opportunit­ies with Iran opened up after some sanctions were lifted as part of the nuclear deal, which went into effect a year ago.

“I also learned a long time ago that sometimes being the first in is not necessaril­y best,” Tillerson said. “We’ll wait and see if things open up for U. S. companies. We would certainly take a look because it’s a huge resource- owning country.”

Republican­s in Congress oppose the nuclear deal, saying it puts billions of dollars in the hands of an anti- U. S. regime that sponsors terrorism around the world. Last year, they moved to block financing for a large sale of Boeing commercial aircraft to Iran. Trump also has assailed the nuclear pact and vowed to scrap it.

ExxonMobil spokesman Alan Jeffers told USA TODAY on Tuesday that Tillerson, who resigned from the company to join Trump’s Cabinet, was answering a hypothetic­al question in the CNBC interview. “Anywhere we can work legally, we would do so, but the current situation in Iran now is not one that allows us to do that,” Jeffers said.

According to correspond­ence between ExxonMobil and the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company did business with Iran through a European joint venture, Infineum, from 2003 to 2005, when U. S. companies were barred from doing business with Tehran.

The oil giant said the transactio­ns were legal because they were conducted and managed by a European company co- owned with Shell whose management was independen­t and involved no U. S. personnel.

Tillerson was a senior vice president at ExxonMobil from August 2001 until he became president and director in March 2004. He became chairman and chief executive on Jan. 1, 2006.

In a letter to USA TODAY on Tuesday, Suzanne McCarron, ExxonMobil’s vice president for public and government affairs, said: “The transactio­ns in question complied fully with all laws and regulation­s and no federal agency took action following the company’s responses to the SEC’s routine inquiry more than a decade ago.”

“The company had limited business in the countries during the 2003- 2005 period asked about by the SEC, which strictly complied with all applicable regulation­s,” McCarron said.

Jeffers said no such joint ventures are currently in place with foreign companies doing business in Iran.

Tillerson’s career at ExxonMobil involved finding, exploring and producing petroleum, and he was unlikely to have been involved in the joint venture before he became president of the company in 2004, Jeffers said.

 ?? SERGEI ILNITSKY, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ?? ExxonMobil chief Rex Tillerson speaks during the 21stWorld Petroleum Congress inMoscow on June 16, 2014.
SERGEI ILNITSKY, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ExxonMobil chief Rex Tillerson speaks during the 21stWorld Petroleum Congress inMoscow on June 16, 2014.

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