Thursday, July 19, 2007

DAR AL HARB - THE WEST: AMERICA INTENDS ON TIGHTENING THE SCREWS ON INFIDEL INDUSTRIES THAT DO BUSINESS WITH IRAN

America plans new crackdown on European businesses trading in Iran
by Tom Baldwin in Washington

British businesses with investments in Iran face punitive sanctions from American authorities under proposed legislation expected to be approved by Congress in the coming months.

Companies that could be hit include Shell, the Anglo-Dutch oil group, as well as British banks such as Standard Chartered and HSBC.

The Bill is causing deep concern among diplomats in Washington who have sent officials to Capitol Hill warning about the possible consequences of igniting a transatlantic trade dispute.

American companies are already banned from doing business with Iran, but many European companies retain interests in the oil-rich Islamic Republic, which they regard as having the potential to become one of the world’s last great emerging markets.

The proposed legislation has attracted bipartisan support in Congress. It would implement the partially ignored 1998 Iran Sanctions Act, which allows for action to be taken against any business with investments worth more than $20 million (£9.7 million) in the country.

Some experts believe that any attempt to impose sanctions would be subject to legal challenges by the EU, while others suggest that existing trading links – as opposed to investment – would be unaffected.

The prospect of being denied trading rights in the US – a far more valuable market than Iran – has for nine years been avoided by the use of waivers issued to EU companies from both the Clinton and Bush Administrations.

Although the White House has sought to increase pressure on European companies to disinvest from Iran as part of a strategy to “quarantine” the Tehran regime, President Bush has continued to exempt such businesses from sanctions.

Senior US officials fear that draconian action could destroy the fragile multilateral alliance against Iran’s nuclear programme and its defiance of successive United Nations resolutions.

A diplomatic source said yesterday:
“There are a lot of Democrats in Congress who want to be seen as doing something tough on Iran short of taking military action. We’re hoping that sensible people in the Administration will explain to them that this is not a good time to be falling out with their European allies who also want to stop Iran getting nuclear weapons.”

However, Tom Lantos,
the Democrat chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee in the House of Representatives, said that the President “has never sanctioned any foreign oil company that invested in Iran – those halcyon days for the oil industry are over”. He added: “The corporate barons running giant oil companies – who have cravenly turned a blind eye to Iran’s development of nuclear weapons – have come to assume that the Iran Sanctions Act will never be implemented. This charade now comes to a long overdue end.”

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Pertinent Links:

1) America plans new crackdown on European businesses trading in Iran

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