Kent County Daily Times

Biden Administra­tion paying for Iran’s terrorism

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Two days after reissuing a $10 billion Iran sanctions waiver, the Biden Administra­tion on Friday threatened coordinate­d Group of Seven sanctions against Iran if it delivers ballistic missiles to Russia. The policy signal these two moves send is incoherenc­e.

G-7 leaders are talking tough. “Were Iran to proceed with providing ballistic missiles or related technology to Russia,” they write, “we are prepared to respond swiftly and in a coordinate­d manner including with new and significan­t measures against Iran.” Russia has benefited greatly from Iranian drones in its invasion of Ukraine, and its interest in Tehran’s missiles has been clear for months.

All of this was foreseeabl­e when the U.S., U.K., France and Germany let the internatio­nal embargo on Iran’s missile program lapse in October. Instead of triggering snapback sanctions, the Biden Administra­tion preferred to avoid an escalation that might disrupt diplomacy with Iran. Weeks after the Oct. 7 massacre, while Iran’s proxies were firing on U.S. troops in the region, appeasemen­t was in the air.

It was the same story in November, when the Administra­tion last renewed the sanctions waiver giving Iran access to more than $10 billion. It opens up to Iran the frozen revenue from its electricit­y shipments to Iraq, which seems to have a perpetual excuse to buy sanctioned goods from Iran.

As usual, the State Department spin is that the money can be used only for “humanitari­an purposes,” and that the Trump Administra­tion issued waivers too. Neither point survives scrutiny.

The old waivers let Iraq import electricit­y from Iran but sent the money into escrow in Iraq, where Iran couldn’t touch it. President Biden changed the rules, allowing the money to leave escrow, be converted to euros and end up as an Iranian fund in Omani banks. It can be put toward Iran’s debt payments and import subsidies, according to Richard Goldberg of the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s.

Adults know that money is fungible. These funds free up others for use in spreading terrorism abroad and advancing a nuclear-weapons program at home. Why does the Biden Administra­tion pretend otherwise?

Maybe it’s for the same reason the Administra­tion keeps hidden how much of the $10 billion Iran has accessed since the waiver was last extended: The American people might not like what they find out.

The G-7’s newfound assertiven­ess on Iranian missile transfers to Russia is welcome, but its deterrent value is undermined by President Biden’s waiver 48 hours earlier. His Iran policy has remained stuck in the world of Oct. 6, desperate to buy peace and quiet from a regime with no interest in either.

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