Orlando Sentinel

Lawmakers question $1.7B payment to Iran

Administra­tion says issue was separate from prisoner swap

- By Bradley Klapper

WASHINGTON — The Obama administra­tion’s $1.7 billion payment to Iran to settle an arcane, decades-old financial dispute is prompting questions among Republican lawmakers trying to piece together the full scope of last weekend’s dramatic U.S.Iranian prisoner swap and the lifting of many American sanctions on Tehran.

The announceme­nt’s timing, just after confirmati­on that three Americans left Iranian airspace, is leading to calls for investigat­ions and shedding light on a little-known fund that the president can dip into when he wants to resolve internatio­nal financial disputes. Legislativ­e efforts are already afoot to curtail that ability.

U.S. officials deny claims that the payment was a bribe to ensure the release of a total of five Americans traded for the freedom of seven people in legal trouble in the U.S. over business deals with Iran.

With the United Nations’ confirmati­on that Iran satisfied the terms of last summer’s nuclear agreement, it immediatel­y recouped tens of billions of dollars in frozen assets and earned the chance to gain significan­tly more from suspended oil, trade and financial sanctions.

The much smaller U.S.Iranian agreement concerned more than $400 million in Iranian money, dating back to before the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the end of diplomatic ties, which the U.S.backed shah’s government used to buy American military equipment.

The Iranians got that money back last weekend and some $1.3 billion in interest.

The administra­tion said the settlement was decided on its merits.

Earlier last week, however, one Iranian military commander painted the payment in a different light. Mohammad Reza Naghdi, head of the Basij paramilita­ry wing of the powerful Revolution­ary Guard, said the wiring of the funds was a payoff for letting the Americans go. U.S. officials insist that’s not true.

“There was no bribe, there was no ransom, there was nothing paid to secure the return of these Americans who were, by the way, not spies,” State Department spokesman Mark Toner responded, referring to the charges that held each of the Americans in Iranian prison for years.

In exchange for the Americans, the U.S. pardoned or dropped charges against seven Iranian citizens accused of sanctions violations, and gave up on extraditio­n requests for 14 additional people.

In explaining his rationale last weekend, President Barack Obama said the settlement “could save us billions of dollars that could have been pursued by Iran. So there was no benefit to the United States in dragging this out.”

Rep. Mike Pompeo, RKan., is seeking an in- vestigatio­n. The GOP-led House Foreign Affairs Committee has asked congressio­nal researcher­s to look into the matter. And Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., has introduced legislatio­n in the Senate that would limit Obama’s ability to transfer funds to Iran.

“The United States should not be funding government­s that openly violate human rights, proudly disregard U.N. Security Council resolution­s and call for the destructio­n of America and its allies,” Moran said in a statement.

Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., the House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman, told The Associated Press, “This concession was never raised by the State Department as on the table, which the administra­tion must answer for.”

To make the payment, the administra­tion returned the $400 million balance from the Iranian account once used for military purchases.

The rest of the money came from an account administer­ed by the Treasury Department for settling litigation claims. The socalled Judgment Fund is taxpayer money Congress has permanentl­y approved in the event it’s needed, allowing the president to bypass direct congressio­nal approval to make a settlement.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? President Barack Obama said the U.S. had no reason to continue a decades-old financial dispute with Iran.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP President Barack Obama said the U.S. had no reason to continue a decades-old financial dispute with Iran.

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