The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

White House challenges Iran with more sanctions

Administra­tion also adds $20M reward for missing agent.

- By Carol Morello

On the 40th anniversar­y of the U.S. Embassy takeover in Tehran, the Trump administra­tion imposed new sanctions Monday on the core inner circle of advisers to Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and added $20 million to a reward for informatio­n about a former FBI agent who disappeare­d in Iran 12 years ago.

The sanctions target some of Khamenei’s closest advisers, including his second son, Mojtaba Khamenei, who often represents his father at official functions even though he has never been appointed to a government position, U.S. officials said.

Others sanctioned include Ebrahim Raisi, the newly appointed head of Iran’s judiciary, and Mohammad Mohammadi Golpayegan­i, the supreme leader’s chief of staff. The list also includes an adviser who arranged credit lines for oil shipments to the Syrian government, and the head of Iran’s Armed Forces General Staff, the top military body in Iran.

As if to underscore the long history of conflict between the United States and Iran, the Treasury Department also sanctioned Hossein Dehghan, one of Khamenei’s military aides, who was a commander in Lebanon during the 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut that killed 241 service members.

“Today’s anniversar­y is a stark reminder that we are dealing with, today, the same regime that sprung up 40 years ago; the same regime that remains committed to violence and hostage taking that our diplomats encountere­d so long ago,” said a senior administra­tion official, referring to the 1979 student takeover of the U.S. Embassy in which more than 50 diplomats and military guards were held captive for 444 days.

This official, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity under the Trump administra­tion’s media guidelines.

“Forty years later, the revolution­ary regime in Tehran has proven, time and again, that its first acts after gaining power were a clear indication of its evil character,” said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in a statement. “The regime continues to unjustly detain Americans and to support terrorist proxy groups like Hezbollah that engage in hostage taking.”

Pompeo expanded on his characteri­zation of Iran in a ceremony at the State Department to commemorat­e the anniversar­y, an event attended by many of the surviving hostages, their relatives and the families of some of the five Americans known to be missing or imprisoned in Iran. Pompeo demanded Iran release them.

“Everyone involved in the Iran hostage crisis showed the world what they were made of,” he said, extolling the courage of those who held up under captivity for 15 months. “The revolution­ary regime showed their true malice and evil.”

The State Department announced a $20 million addition to a $5 million FBI reward for informatio­n on the whereabout­s of Robert Levinson, a retired FBI agent who vanished during a 2007 visit to Kish Island in Iran.

Levinson’s family issued a statement pleading with the government in Tehran to end hostage-taking.

‘Everyone involved in the Iran hostage crisis showed the world what they were made of. The revolution­ary regime showed their true malice and evil.’ Mike Pompeo Secretary of State

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