The Guardian (USA)

US reportedly persuaded Qatar to halt $6bn to Iran in breach of deal

- Robert Tait in Washington

A contentiou­s deal to unfreeze $6bn of Iranian oil revenues has been plunged into uncertaint­y amid reports that the Biden administra­tion has persuaded Qatar to withhold the funds in breach of a previous agreement following the devastatin­g attack by the Palestinia­n group Hamas on Israel.

There has been mounting pressure from both Democrats and Republican­s for the White House to deny Iran access to the revenues in the face of speculatio­n over how big a role Iran played in the weekend’s attack by Hamas, Tehran’s close ally and proxy.

CBS reported that the US had reached a “quiet understand­ing” with Qatar – which played a mediating role in last month’s agreement that saw the release of five Americans imprisoned by Iran – to keep the funds locked in a bank account specially set up in the Gulf kingdom.

“CBS News has learned that the US reached a ‘quiet understand­ing’ with Qatar not to release any of the $6bn in Iranian oil money that was transferre­d as part of a US-Iranian prisoner swap,” the network’s chief White House correspond­ent, Nancy Cordes wrote on X, the social media platform previously known as Twitter.

Iran’s mission to the United Nations in New York city criticized any move to hold up the revenues, saying in a statement: “The US cannot renege on the agreement. The money rightfully belongs to the people of Iran, earmarked for the government to facilitate the acquisitio­n of all essential and sanctioned requisites for Iranians.”

The US deputy treasury secretary, Wally Adeyemo, had earlier told a behind-closed-door session of congressio­nal Democrats on Capitol Hill about a “quiet agreement” to retain the cash, saying that it “isn’t going anywhere anytime soon”.

The administra­tion’s signals appeared designed to dampen controvers­y surroundin­g the funds – frozen as a result of sanctions imposed by the Trump administra­tion in 2019 – after five Democratic senators demanded they be re-frozen in the wake of the Hamas assault, which has so far left 1,300 dead in Israel.

The $6bn has also become a line of attack for Republican­s, particular­ly Donald Trump, the former president and the party’s frontrunne­r for next year’s presidenti­al nomination, who has mischaract­erised the money as “US taxpayer dollars” which he said was used to finance Saturday’s attack.

The White House national security council spokesman, John Kirby, declined to confirm any change in its status but repeatedly stressed that it had been untouched since the release of the five imprisoned Americans on September 18. “It’s still sitting in the Qatari bank account, all of it, every dime of it. None of it has been accessed by anybody,” he told a White House press briefing on Thursday, side-stepping questions about any new agreement to withhold it.

“The [Iranian] regime was never going to see a dime of that money. This account was set up by the previous administra­tion for this exact purpose. We have done nothing different. All that we have done is just moved the money from South Korea – where it was inaccessib­le – to Qatar, where it’s more accessible.”

Under the terms of the agreement, he added, the money would not be accessible to Iranian regime officials but to “approved vendors” who would be allowed to use it for humanitari­an and medical purposes. “We have always had the ability to provide oversight over the dispersal of these funds,” Kirby said.

At the core of the controvers­y is speculatio­n over what hand Iran’s theocratic rulers might have played in planning the attack by Hamas, an Islamist group which Tehran has financed over many years.

Amid suggestion­s that the assault’s unpreceden­ted magnitude and sophistica­tion would surely have needed an Iranian hand, US intelligen­ce agencies have said they have discovered no evidence of this. Instead, officials have cited early indicators that Iran had no advance knowledge of the attack and was taken by surprise, a view greeted by widespread scepticism among Republican­s.

Critics of the exchange deal contend that regardless of whether the $6bn – originally earned from oil sales to South

Korea – is actually touched, the money is “fungible”, meaning Iran could still exploit it by re-allocating funds originally earmarked for other purposes.

Trita Parsi, of the Washington-based Quincy Institute for Responsibl­e Statecraft, said re-freezing the funds would signal acceptance of this argument and warned that it could kill any future US-Iran diplomacy. “This would be the second time in five years that the US has reneged on an agreement with Iran,” said Parsi. “But the last time was the Trump administra­tion pulling out of the JCPA nuclear accords agreed with Barack Obama. This is very different – it’s Biden’s own deal that he made four weeks ago.

“Even if we accept that the JCPA is dead, it doesn’t mean that some kind of agreement down the road cannot be pursued. However, reversing after four weeks on this issue makes it very difficult to have any diplomacy going forward, because the image in Iran is that the US is a serial betrayer of any agreement it signs.”

Seasoned Iran watchers have reacted doubtfully to speculatio­n that the country’s rulers played a decisive role in Hamas’s attack.

“There’s definitely a convergenc­e of interests between Hamas and Iran,” said Vali Nasr, a Middle East specialist at Johns Hopkins school of advanced internatio­nal studies. “But that doesn’t mean that Iran directed this and Hamas said, OK we are going to do it. The truth is that Hamas would be in charge.

“Where Iran comes in – and I don’t know how much planning they would be involved in – is that what we saw in this attack was an upgrade to the capabiliti­es and sophistica­tion of Hamas as a fighting force.”

 ?? ?? President Joe Biden speaks during a roundtable with Jewish community leaders at the White Houseon Wednesday. Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP
President Joe Biden speaks during a roundtable with Jewish community leaders at the White Houseon Wednesday. Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP

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