The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

U.S. sanctions Iranians after missile strikes in Iraq, Gulf

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON >> The United States sanctioned Iranian defense companies Wednesday after a spate of ballistic missile attacks on targets in Iraq and the Gulf.

The U.S. and Iran’s neighbors blame that country for a March 13 strike on Irbil, Iraq, and for repeated missile strikes into Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates by Iranian-backed Houthi fighters in Yemen.

On Friday, a Houthi missile strike set ablaze a Saudi Aramco oil storage site, prompting warnings from angry Saudi leaders that the attacks threatened the stability of the world oil market.

Even as the U.S. carries out indirect negotiatio­ns with Iran for reviving limits on Iran’s nuclear program, it will keep up penalties against those involved in Iran’s ballistic missile production, Treasury Undersecre­tary Brian Nelson said in announcing the sanctions.

“We will also work with other partners in the region to hold Iran accountabl­e for its actions, including gross violations of the sovereignt­y of its neighbors,” Nelson said in a statement.

The Treasury Department said Wednesday’s sanctions target an Iranbased procuremen­t agent and his companies, which helped acquire propellant-related materials for the missile research program of Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard; an Iranian defense company; and an Iranian intermedia­ry who also helped in the developmen­t of missile propellant.

The sanctions were authorized under an existing executive order targeting producers and supporters of weapons of mass destructio­n. The penalties allow the U.S. to block the assets of the sanctioned people and entities, and to prosecute others who do business with them.

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