Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ties to Iran, Houthis, Hezbollah prompt U.S. to sanction firms

- KAREEM CHEHAYEB AND FATIMA HUSSEIN

WASHINGTON — The United States on Tuesday imposed sanctions on a money exchanger and a group of firms across six countries involved in commodity shipments and business transactio­ns that benefit Iran’s military and the Houthi militant group in Yemen and the Hezbollah militia in Lebanon.

The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned six firms, two tankers and a money exchanger, all either based or registered in Liberia, India, Vietnam, Lebanon or Kuwait. They are accused of materially benefiting Iran, the Houthis and Hezbollah.

Hezbollah and the Houthis have been launching regular attacks since the onset of Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza, and they have sparked internatio­nal concern that the war in the Palestinia­n enclave could spill over into the rest of the Middle East.

Hezbollah militants and Israeli troops exchange fire on a near-daily basis along Lebanon’s southern border, which has led to the displaceme­nt of tens of thousands of people on both sides. Despite losing more than 200 combatants and Israel striking deeper into the tiny country, Hezbollah maintains that it will stop launching rockets into northern Israel only when there is a cease-fire in Gaza.

In a separate announceme­nt Tuesday, Treasury slapped sanctions on 11 people and entities accused of facilitati­ng financial transfers to the Syrian government to help it duck sanctions and being involved in the traffickin­g of a highly addictive amphetamin­e called Captagon that has become a booming industry in the war-torn country.

Treasury sanctioned a Syrian identified as Taher al-Kayali and his company Neptunus LLC, accused of purchasing cargo ships to smuggle Captagon to Europe. One of his ships was intercepte­d by Greek authoritie­s in 2018. Mahmoud Abulilah Al-Dj and his companies AlTa’ir Company and Free-Bird Travel and Tourism were also sanctioned. He has had several of his drug shipments seized in Libya, and has cooperated with Abulilah. Al-Dj is also the “exclusive agent” of sanctioned Syrian airliner Cham Wings in Libya, Treasury said.

Experts say Captagon is primarily produced in Syria and Lebanon, where packages containing millions of pills are smuggled into Gulf countries, Europe and elsewhere. The trade allegedly has strong ties to Syrian President Bashar Assad and his associates, as well as the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group in neighborin­g Lebanon.

Western government­s estimate that the industry has generated billions of dollars in revenue for Syria. Syria’s Arab neighbors, notably Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and other Gulf states, have been desperate to halt the trade, as millions of pills have been smuggled in.

Meanwhile, Treasury slapped sanctions on Syria-based Maya Exchange Company, as well as Aleksey Makarov, the vice president of the listed Russian Financial Cooperatio­n Bank, and Muhammad ‘Ali Al-Minala of the Syrian central bank, who used the exchange company to make payments to “a Jordanian beneficiar­y.”

Treasury also slapped sanctions on STF Logistic which it claims has generated tens of millions of revenue for the Syrian government and through a 50-year contract with Damascus has been granted the right to almost three-quarters of sales revenue from Syrian mines near Palmyra. Grains Middle East Trading, and its chief executive officer Yafi David were sanctioned for serving as an intermedia­ry for STF Logistic. The company is based in Switzerlan­d and the United Arab Emirates.

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