The Mercury News Weekend

Trump targets Hezbollah as key sanctions deadline nears

- By Nick Wadhams, Margaret Talev and Kambiz Foroohar IRANNUCLEA­R DEAL

WASHINGTON » The Trump administra­tion moved to ratchet up pressure on Iran Thursday as the president faces a series of deadlines for decisions on sanctions underpinni­ng the 2015 nuclear deal with the Islamic Republic.

The Justice Department said it will establish a “financing and narcoterro­rism” team to target Iran’s ally Hezbollah, which the U. S. considers a terrorist organizati­on. Later in the day, President Donald Trump was scheduled to meet with his national security team before the first deadlines on Iran sanctions come Friday

hile the president plans to extend waivers on sanctions against Iran that were suspended under the nuclear deal, he is also preparing new sanctions targeting Iran for ballistic missile, human rights and cyber violations. Those moves are intended to increase pressure without abrogating the nuclear accord that Iran reached with the U.S. and five other world powers, according to two administra­tion officials familiar with the matter.

Measures to isolate and pressure Iran partly “by spotlighti­ng human rights abuses, corruption, support to terrorism and militant proxies, progress on their ballistic missile program, which is still subject to UN sanctions — all of that can be undertaken right away,” Juan Zarate, a former assistant secretary for terrorist financing and financial crimes at the Treasury Department, said during a congressio­nal hearing Wednesday.

Trump will make a final decision Thursday, according to a U. S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in advance of an announceme­nt.

The Justice Department move seemed aimed at boosting resources for a program, known as Project Cassandra, target-. ing Hezbollah’s drug traffickin­g and related operations. In that sense, it would be similar to administra­tion efforts to disrupt financing flows, even relatively minor ones, that benefit North Korea’s government, which is also heavily sanctioned by the U. S.

“The team will initiate prosecutio­ns that will restrict the flow of money to foreign terrorist organizati­ons as well as disrupt violent internatio­nal drug traffickin­g operations,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a statement.

Nuclear- related sanctions that were waived under the 2015 deal stem from four separate pieces of legislatio­n. Those laws all grant the president the power to waive the restrictio­ns but set different timetables for how frequently he must do so. As it happens, those deadlines all fall due in the next several days.

Trump must officially decide by Friday whether to continue relief from sanctions that cut off Iran’s central bank from the global financial system. Waiving those restrictio­ns was required under the agreement that Iran reached with world powers in exchange for curbing its nuclear program, and reimposing them would effectivel­y scuttle the deal.

The administra­tion officials, who asked not to be identified discussing private deliberati­ons, both stressed that no final decision had been made and said the president’s plans could change at any time.

The administra­tion vocally supported street protests this month by Iranians against economic mismanagem­ent and the political system, which led to at least 20 deaths and about 1,000 arrests.

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