Los Angeles Times

Europe-Iran trade conduit

New financial mechanism aims to salvage the nuclear deal with Tehran

- By Nabih Bulos

BEIRUT — As Iran presses on with its gradual dismantlin­g of terms set by the 2015 nuclear deal, and while tensions with the U.S. increase ever higher, European signatorie­s say a new financial mechanism can salvage the accord.

That mechanism, INSTEX, aims to provide Iran with an incentive to stay in the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA), as the nuclear agreement is formally known, despite the U.S. withdrawal last year.

In May, on the anniversar­y of that withdrawal, Iran began a careful but escalating campaign of enriching and stockpilin­g uranium beyond the deal’s limits.

If INSTEX doesn’t compensate Iran for staying in the deal even as the U.S. levies additional sanctions, among other measures, Tehran has threatened to walk away from the accord altogether.

What is INSTEX?

At its heart, INSTEX — the Instrument in Support of Trade Exchanges — is a clearingho­use for trade deals between Iran and Europe that allows companies to avoid payment across borders.

Establishe­d in January by Britain, France and Germany, it’s headquarte­red in Paris and became operationa­l last month. The mechanism avoids use of U.S. dollars.

Iran establishe­d a mirror entity in April called the Special Trade and Finance Institute.

What does that mean?

Say you have a European company sending machinery to an Iranian importer, and an Iranian company sending pistachios to Europe. Normally, the Iranian importer in the first deal would have to send money to Europe and the European importer would send money to Iran. Instead, INSTEX would match those two transactio­ns: The European importer pays for the pistachios by giving money to the European exporter. The two Iranian companies pay each other in rials.

This way there is no direct financial flow between Iran and Europe, but commoditie­s can still travel to and from Iran.

Why is this important?

In two words, “secondary sanctions.”

The U.S. has long used primary sanctions, such as asset freezes or trade embargoes that prevent U.S. companies from doing business in Iran.

Secondary sanctions target non-U.S. entities for engaging in commercial activities or providing material support to Iran.

Punishment­s can include denial of visas and import/export certificat­es, denying these foreign entities the use of American dollars or even cutting them out of the U.S. financial system and forbidding any U.S. party from doing business with them.

Banks, especially, have been skittish.

Because a number of the large internatio­nal banks have been hit substantia­lly by sanctions over the years, they’re reluctant to engage in any business that could jeopardize their access to U.S. markets, said Doug Davison, a sanctions expert at the London-based law firm Linklaters and former SEC official. “They [the banks] have in effect become the best enforcers.”

Even though the Office of Foreign Assets Control, the U.S. government­al agency enforcing the sanctions, is small, the sanctions are open to interpreta­tion in a way that gives it an outsize chilling effect, Davison said.

“We’ve had clients who had transactio­ns that weren’t problemati­c,” he said. “But once the transactio­ns are flagged as potentiall­y problemati­c, the banks are very reluctant to process them, even if there is a good explanatio­n, given the substantia­l risk in making the wrong call.”

And the complex legal demands, which require the attention of an army of compliance officers, along with the comparativ­ely minor reward for doing business with Iran, mean that a deal is usually not worth the effort.

At this point, banks are so intimidate­d they’ll refuse dealing with a company with any exposure to Iran, even if the business it brings is completely unrelated.

So INSTEX helps Iran circumvent sanctions?

No. INSTEX, at least to start, deals with humanitari­an aid, which in theory is still allowed.

“It’s designed to process transactio­ns that are permissibl­e under U.S. sanctions but aren’t happening because of over-compliance on the part of non-U.S. banks.,” said Jarrett Blanc, the State Department’s coordinato­r for Iran nuclear implementa­tion under President Obama.

Companies doing business with INSTEX would still have to demonstrat­e they’ve done their due diligence on who the end-user in Iran will be, said Esfandyar Batmanghel­idj, an Iran expert and founder of the media company Bourse and Bazaar.

Still, coordinati­ng transactio­ns through INSTEX would make it easier to do them at scale, Batmanghel­idj added. And because INSTEX is a European state-owned company, it would lend transactio­ns an imprimatur that had so far been impossible to gain.

So the U.S. is f ine with it?

Not quite. The U.S. says that if INSTEX deals with unsanction­ed commoditie­s then it should be fine. And initially, said Richard Nephew, a research scholar and former State Department sanctions expert who was on the negotiatin­g team for the Iran nuclear deal, there were even discussion­s in Washington about leveraging INSTEX to solve the issue of humanitari­an trade.

“It’s pretty clear that that line of argument, held in some quarters of the administra­tion, has lost.… We’ve clearly decided that we’re going to make as inhospitab­le an environmen­t for INSTEX as we can,” Nephew said, adding that the use of Iranian financial institutio­ns (every major Iranian bank is targeted) could trip U.S. sanctions. “Our view of it is not that it’s a possibly useful vehicle, but a threat to the sanctions’ architectu­re. I don’t see a chance of that changing.”

With previous administra­tions, even when a severe sanctions regime like the one on Iran was in place, the U.S. would make efforts to keep permissibl­e trade “not just permissibl­e but practicall­y possible,” said Blanc.

But when Trump administra­tion officials meet with foreign government­s and banks, he said, “the way they describe the rules make it perfectly clear that, in their view, there’s no way to comply with the rules.”

“It’s making permissibl­e trade practicall­y impossible.”

And what are Iranian officials saying?

Mostly, they’ve been complainin­g that INSTEX in its current form doesn’t go far enough because it doesn’t allow Iran to sell its oil. That’s a problem; in 2017, almost 90% of the European Union’s imports from Iran — worth some $11.4 billion — were energy-related, the European Commission says.

Without that money, Iranian companies don’t have the cash to import anything, making INSTEX moot.

“This mechanism without money is like a beautiful car without fuel,” Majid Takht Ravanchi, Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations, said at a news conference last month, according to an official news report.

Besides, other Iranian officials have insisted they intend INSTEX to be used for more than just food and medicine, and that eventually it should handle sanctioned goods.

But behind the bold statements, Batmanghel­idj said, Iran was more realistic “over INSTEX as one or part of a package of solutions.”

“The Iranians have undertaken their own efforts to set up their own vehicle,” he said. “If they fundamenta­lly didn’t believe it couldn’t work, then they wouldn’t have gone through that whole process.”

 ?? Atta Kenare AFP/Getty Images ?? A SYSTEM known as INSTEX is intended to compensate Iran for staying in the nuclear agreement as the U.S. levies more sanctions. Above, traffic in Tehran.
Atta Kenare AFP/Getty Images A SYSTEM known as INSTEX is intended to compensate Iran for staying in the nuclear agreement as the U.S. levies more sanctions. Above, traffic in Tehran.

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