Monday, July 1, 2013

Eye on Iran: Tough US Sanctions on Iran Hit Monday











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WSJ: "Sanctions on Iran by the U.S. signed into law in January, and implemented and expanded via executive order in early June come into effect on Monday... 'These actions demonstrate that the U.S. is continuing to constrict the Iranian economy and will flex its extraterritorial muscles to do so,' said a recent client alert from Norton Rose Fulbright. 'A growing number of international actors should be concerned about their potential exposure under the Iran sanctions.' The law, signed in January as part of the annual national defense authorization act, targets the Iranian energy, shipping and shipbuilding sectors, barring the sale, supply or transfer of 'significant' goods or services by non-U.S. companies... But the executive order goes even further than that. It targets the Iranian rial, giving the U.S. the power to place sanctions on foreign financial institutions conducting 'significant' transactions involving the currency. The goal, senior administration officials said in June, was to make the rial useless outside of Iran. Individuals or foreign financial institutions found providing material support to anyone already under sanctions against Iran are themselves subject to sanctions, the order says. 'This will expand greatly the extraterritorial application of sanctions to transactions with Iranian government-owned entities,' said Jonathan Epstein, a partner with Holland & Knight, in a client alert earlier in June. The order authorizes sanctions against those who sell, supply or transfer to Iran goods or services that aid in making light and heavy vehicles such as passenger cars, trucks, buses, minibuses, pick-up trucks and motorcycles. The sanctions focused on the auto sector also target foreign financial institutions." http://t.uani.com/14InmLb

Reuters: "The top U.S. energy official said he believed the oil market could cope with any further reduction of Iran's oil exports from the tightening of sanctions on Tehran over its nuclear program... Moniz said Iranian exports were not now a 'dominant player in the market', and was offset by increased production in the United States and in Iraq as well as substantial reserve capacity in some of the major OPEC producers such as Saudi Arabia. 'So I would think that with further sanctions, the markets could be quite resilient to that,' said Moniz, who took office last month. From a technical point of view, 'we can certainly manage a further reduction of Iranian exports', he added." http://t.uani.com/1b0J1mL

AFP: "US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew expressed hope the economic sanctions aimed at stopping Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program will work, because 'the alternatives are worse.' Lew -- whose Treasury Department is tasked with enforcing the sanctions -- was speaking Sunday at a conference in Aspen, Colorado. 'It would be the best thing for Iran and the best thing for the world if economic sanctions worked because the alternatives are worse for Iran and for the world,' Lew said. 'I don't think any (US) president should make the decision about whether or not to go beyond the sanctions without having exhausted the tools available,' he added... The US treasury secretary painted a bleak picture of Iran's economy where, he said, 'sanctions are working.' 'We are seeing it in Iran's GDP, we are seeing it in the value of the rial, in the employment rate, in the inflation rate. It's not a pretty picture from an economic perspective.' Lew called the current sanctions the 'toughest sanctions in history,' and credited an international united front: 'We have not seen the kind of slippage in international support for sanctions that some people have speculated about.' 'The goal is not to hurt the Iranian people. The goal is to change their decision,' the Obama administration official said." http://t.uani.com/13lbv94
Election Repression Toolkit 
Sanctions

AzerNews: "The first U.S. sanctions against Iran's vehicle industry take effect today, July 1, as the U.S has ratcheted up its efforts to isolate Iran for its uranium enrichment program, in other words for developing a nuclear weapon... In his ninth executive order against Iran on June 3, U.S. President Barack Obama approved sanctions against people who do business with Iran's auto sector which the White House said was a major source of revenue for Tehran. South Korean companies have officially announced that they will not accept orders from Iran for selling car parts to them. According to projections, the sanctions will lead to a 40 percent rise in production costs in Iranian car-making companies as Korean suppliers used to provide Iranian companies with 60 percent of their needs. They are planning to replace Korean suppliers with Chinese ones." http://t.uani.com/1auNWxD

WSJ: "New York's finance regulator is setting his sights on the world's reinsurance firms, alleging some of them may be involved in practices that won't comply with pending U.S. laws against doing business with Iran. A yearlong probe by Benjamin Lawsky, superintendent of New York's Department of Financial Services, has uncovered evidence that at least three non-U.S. firms insured shipments to Iran, according to people with knowledge of the investigation. As a result of the probe, Mr. Lawsky last week wrote to 20 non-U.S. reinsurance companies requesting detailed information on their dealings with entities or people connected to Iran, according to a copy of the letter reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. Mr. Lawsky's office sent the letter to some of the world's largest reinsurance companies, including Swiss Re AG, Hannover Re SE and Lloyd's of London. However, the letter didn't name the three firms that allegedly insured the shipments. Reinsurance firms provide backup protection to insurance companies seeking to offset their risk." http://t.uani.com/11T9Aa8

WSJ: "Georgian Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili's government blitzed Capitol Hill this week with memos detailing Tbilisi's commitment to squeezing Iran and stressing his desire to maintain his country's pro-Western stance... A recent front-page article in The Wall Street Journal detailed evidence that Tehran has been attempting to use Georgia, a former Soviet republic, to evade mounting U.S. and European sanctions that are aimed at curbing Iran's nuclear program. Mr. Ivanishvili's government, in memos sent to lawmakers and lobbyists by Patton Boggs this week, pledged to aggressively choke off any Iranian government money moving through Georgia and the Caucasus region. It also sought to shift blame to Mr. Saakashvili for Georgia's pursuit of policies that led to the sharp increase in Iranian investments. They singled out Tbilisi's 2011 decision to lift the visa requirements for Iranian nationals seeking to enter Georgia." http://t.uani.com/14kfuRf

AP: "An Oregon jury has convicted a Texas urologist and his attorney wife of defrauding the government in a scheme prosecutors allege also violated a U.S. trade embargo with Iran. They couple still faces federal charges in Texas that they defrauded private health care programs of more than $1.5 million in a trial scheduled for October. Dr. Hossein Lahiji and his wife, Najmeh, were also convicted of conspiracy to engage in money laundering. Prosecutors said the couple, of McAllen, Texas, gave more than $1.8 million to the Oregon branch of an Iranian children's charity that then sent the money on to Iran. Prosecutors say the transactions violated the trade embargo against Iran. Their donations were used to make investments in Iran that they retained control over, according to the indictment." http://t.uani.com/18pE8Eg

AP: "Legislation to divest Rhode Island state money from companies within operations in Iran is heading to Gov. Lincoln Chafee. The state's General Assembly gave the legislation final approval last week. If signed by Chafee, the state's retirement board would be required to identify any investments in companies that operate in Iran. Unless the companies agree to cease operations in Iran, the state would pull its investment. The state would similarly end relationships with any state contractors doing business in Iran." http://t.uani.com/17OxUi3

Human Rights


Iran Human Rights: "Four prisoners were hanged in two different Iranian cities today Sunday June 30. Two of the prisoners were hanged in public. According to the official Iranian news agency IRNA two prisoners convicted of rape were hanged publicly in the city of Karaj (west of Tehran)... According to the official Iranian sources 13 people have been executed since the Iranian Presidential elections on June 14." http://t.uani.com/1b0Kkls

Domestic Politics

NYT: "Iran's president-elect, Hassan Rouhani, said Saturday that he would engage with the West and fulfill his electoral promises to allow more freedom for the Iranian people... Hinting at the revolutions that have ousted several leaders in the Middle East, Mr. Rouhani emphasized that it was important to listen to the 'majority of Iranians.' 'In our region, there were some countries who miscalculated their positions, and you have witnessed what happened to them,' he said during a live broadcast of a conference organized by Voice and Vision, Iran's state television and radio organization. 'The world is in a transitional mood, and a new order has yet to be established,' he said. 'If we miscalculate our national situation, it will be detrimental for us.' He also said Iran should not hesitate to criticize the Syrian government for some of its actions in its war against rebels seeking to oust it." http://t.uani.com/1auMsmS

Reuters: "Iran's president-elect Hassan Rouhani said on Saturday he would appoint ministers from across its political spectrum as Iranian voters had chosen a path of moderation over extremism. His victory in the June 14 vote has lifted hopes of a thaw in Iran's antagonistic relations with the West that might create openings for defusing its nuclear dispute with world powers. Rouhani has pledged a more conciliatory approach than Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, under whose belligerent presidency the Islamic Republic drew ever more punishing international sanctions. Rouhani's pledge of an inclusive cabinet could reassure conservative hardliners who look askance at the endorsement he was granted by reformists in the election. In turn, reformists will hope to regain some political influence - with the aim of easing repression at home and Iran's isolation abroad - after being sidelined under Ahmadinejad, who by law could not run for a third consecutive term... Rouhani also urged moderation in Iranian policies towards the rest of the world and called for a balance between 'realism' and pursuing the ideals of the Islamic Republic. 'Moderation in foreign policy is neither submission nor antagonism, neither passivity nor confrontation. Moderation is effective and constructive interaction with the world,' he said. 'The Islamic Republic of Iran, as a major regional power or the biggest regional power..., must play its role and for this we need moderation.'" http://t.uani.com/12gpTKy

Gallup: "Iranian residents' election of moderate cleric Hassan Rouhani to the presidency has been widely interpreted as evidence of their desire for meaningful change in the country. Rouhani will preside over an increasingly distressed population: Half of Iranians say there have been times in the past year when they have had trouble paying for adequate shelter and for food their families needed. In each case, the 50% figure is the highest among 19 populations in the Middle East and North Africa region that Gallup surveyed in 2012 and 2013." http://t.uani.com/11Ue1RW

Foreign Affairs

LAT: "Iranian authorities confirmed Sunday the arrests of several Slovakian nationals who were taken into custody on espionage-related charges while on a paragliding trip to Iran. Alaeddin Boroujerdi, chairman of Iranian parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Committee, said the group had been acting suspiciously. 'Some Slovakian nationals were taking photos of our country's military sites by glider when arrested by security forces,' he was quoted as saying in a report by Iranian Students News Agency." http://t.uani.com/16JDttp

Opinion & Analysis

Omid Memarian in HuffPo: "Iran's leaders and many analysts and public figures in the West, including both Americans and Iranian-Americans, might argue this recent election was free. Their embrace of this election as a return of Iranian democracy echoes former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who called the vote 'one of the most democratic' elections in the world. The truth is that calling this election 'free' disregards all the machinations and state meddling that preceded the vote itself. All eight candidates were approved by the Guardian Council on condition of their commitment to Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. The reality of running for executive in Iran is that opposition to or criticism of one man, the Supreme Leader, can disqualify a candidate from running. The eight approved men were not representatives of the best and the most deserving citizens of the country. Rather they were all the Leader's appointees, or from the ranks of his advisers, relatives, or long-time friends. It would be more accurate to say that the election was held democratically among eight candidates hand-picked by Iran's Supreme Leader. The only credit due to the Islamic Republic is that within the limited choices it made available to its people, there was no fraud. No compliments and admiration are due to Islamic Republic of Iran for not cheating, stealing people's votes, and betraying the trust of those who accepted this faulty, selective, discriminatory, and undemocratic election for a chance to create a modicum of change. In the months before the vote, Iranian politicians from across the spectrum began warning of 'election engineering,' concerned over the myriad ways a vote can be tainted. The lazy wisdom holds because unlike in 2009, there was no explicit fraud in the counting of ballots, this election was not engineered. But again this overlooks the tight and total control the state exerts over the process. The process of selecting candidates, with the Supreme Leader's approval and vetting by the Guardian Council, whose members are again largely appointed by the Supreme Leader, renders every election to some extent 'engineered,' if that term is meant to describe a process that is controlled and shaped in advance." http://t.uani.com/10uoum9

Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Eye on Iran is not intended as a comprehensive media clips summary but rather a selection of media elements with discreet analysis in a PDA friendly format. For more information please email Press@UnitedAgainstNuclearIran.com

United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) is a non-partisan, broad-based coalition that is united in a commitment to prevent Iran from fulfilling its ambition to become a regional super-power possessing nuclear weapons.  UANI is an issue-based coalition in which each coalition member will have its own interests as well as the collective goal of advancing an Iran free of nuclear weapons.

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