Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iran OKs 2nd bill on U.S. terror tag

- NASSER KARIMI

TEHRAN, Iran — Iranian lawmakers on Tuesday overwhelmi­ngly approved a bill that labels all U.S. military forces as terrorists, state TV reported, a day after Washington ratcheted up pressure on Tehran by announcing that no country would any longer be exempt from U.S. sanctions if it continues to buy Iranian oil.

The bill is a step further from the one last week, when lawmakers approved labeling just U.S. troops in the Middle East as terrorists, in response to the U.S. terrorism designatio­n for Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard earlier this month.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion reimposed sanctions on Iran, including on its energy sector, last November, after pulling America out of the landmark 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers.

The U.S. designatio­n against Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard — the first-ever for an entire division of another government — added another layer of sanctions to the powerful paramilita­ry force, making it a crime under U.S. jurisdicti­on to provide the guard with material support.

On Monday, Trump decided to do away with waivers as part of the administra­tion’s “maximum pressure” campaign on Iran that aims to eliminate all of its revenue from oil exports that the U.S. says funds destabiliz­ing activity throughout the Middle East and beyond.

Hours before Trump’s announceme­nt, Iran reiterated its long-running threat to close the Strait of Hormuz if it’s prevented from using the crucial waterway in the Persian Gulf through which about a third of all oil traded at sea passes. The U.S. Navy has in the past accused Iranian patrol boats of harassing American warships.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry promptly brushed off Trump’s move to stop the oil waivers, saying the Islamic Republic “basically has not seen and does not see any worth and validity for the waivers.”

But on Tuesday, 173 out of 215 lawmakers at the parliament session in Tehran voted for the new bill. Only four voted against while the rest abstained; the chamber has 290 seats.

The bill confirms Iran’s earlier label of the U.S. Central Command and all its forces as terrorist. Any military and nonmilitar­y help, including logistics support, to the U.S. Central Command that can be detrimenta­l to the Revolution­ary Guard will be considered a terrorist action, the semioffici­al Iranian Students’ New Agency said.

The bill also demands the Iranian government take unspecifie­d action against other government­s that formally back the U.S. designatio­n. Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Israel have all supported the Trump administra­tion’s designatio­n.

The lawmakers also requested that Iran’s intelligen­ce agency provide a list of all U.S. Central Command commanders within three months so that Iran’s judiciary can prosecute them in absentia as terrorists.

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