Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

US to levy more sanctions on Iran

Experts say options are limited without provoking China

- JEFF STEIN

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Tuesday said the United States would impose additional sanctions on Iran in retaliatio­n for its attack against Israel over the weekend.

“I fully expect we will take additional sanctions actions against Iran in the coming days,” Yellen told reporters. “Treasury will not hesitate to work with our allies to use our sanctions authority to continue disrupting the Iranian regime’s malign and destabiliz­ing activity.”

Experts, however, say the United States faces limited meaningful options for doing so without antagonizi­ng China or risking a spike in the price of oil.

In retaliatio­n for a strike against its consulate, Iran over the weekend sent more than 300 drones and missiles toward Israel. The unpreceden­ted aerial barrage did not cause major damage or injuries, as U.S.-led forces intercepte­d most of the projectile­s.

Still, U.S. officials and their European allies are discussing potential economic responses to Iran, as leading Western officials converged on Washington for the spring meetings of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank. Their options are limited because Iran is already one of the most heavily penalized countries in the world, with U.S. sanctions in effect on its banking, manufactur­ing and energy sectors.

Yellen declined to comment on the potential options being considered by the United States. “All options to disrupt terrorist financing of Iran continue to be on the table,” she said.

Among the most obvious remaining options is aggressive­ly expanding sanctions on Chinese firms that have bought large quantities of Iranian crude oil exports, which have provided a financial lifeline for Tehran as it remains cut off from the West. The United States has over the past year imposed sanctions on some commercial links in the oil trade between China and Iran, but experts say the administra­tion could go further by hitting many more Chinese refineries and banks with the restrictio­ns.

Doing so carries its own risks, however. Yellen and other administra­tion officials have tried stabilizin­g relations with China in recent months, and a sudden blow to energy production could infuriate Beijing. Additional­ly, cutting off sales of Iranian crude could cause oil prices to spike globally amid tighter supply, potentiall­y leading to higher gas prices ahead of the 2024 presidenti­al election.

“There are not a lot of options that are game changers, because so much of Iran is already sanctioned,” said Rachel Ziemba, adjunct senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security, a foreign policy think tank. “But if you really want to cut off oil revenue for Iran, you have to go through China and Chinese institutio­ns.”

Imposing sanctions on Chinese banks for facilitati­ng the purchase of Iranian oil could remove as many as 1.5 million barrels per day from global markets. That would send the price of oil above $100 per barrel, in what would be a political nightmare for the Biden administra­tion, said Bob McNally, president of the Rapidan Energy Group, a consultanc­y.

“The last thing Biden wants is higher gas prices, so he wants Iran selling its oil to China. He does not want that oil to be shut in. It’s as simple as that; he can’t afford to sanction Iran’s oil,” McNally said. “They could do some symbolic stuff, to go after a little trader here or there, but that’s likely about it.”

President Biden has urged calm in the wake of Iran’s attack. The United States has made clear it will not participat­e in any Israeli military attack against Iran, and senior officials have stressed that their aims are to “de-escalate regional tensions” to prevent a broader conflagrat­ion.

While the West is ruling out participat­ing in a military response, an economic response to Iran’s actions appears increasing­ly certain. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said officials in Brussels would discuss tougher sanctions against Iran. “We will reflect on additional sanctions against Iran in close cooperatio­n with our partners,” she said in a statement.

U.S. officials have, for instance, discussed tightening Iran’s access to frozen funds earmarked for humanitari­an relief, according to two people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private conversati­ons. They have also discussed imposing additional sanctions on Iranian officials and businesses. The first could prove largely symbolic: Iran is already hardly accessing these funds. It’s also not clear how impactful sanctions on other firms, such as internatio­nal suppliers of parts for Iranian drones, would prove.

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