Iran Defiant as US Re-Imposes Measures
Iran's President Hassan Rouhani has vowed to
"break" swingeing sanctions re-imposed by the US targeting core parts
of the economy.
The Trump administration is restoring all sanctions lifted
under the 2015 nuclear deal in a bid to pressure Iran.
They will hit oil exports, shipping and banks, and make it
difficult to do business with the oil-rich nation.
But Mr Rouhani struck a defiant tone, saying that Iran would
"continue selling oil".
"We will proudly break the sanctions," he said at
a meeting of economic officials.
European countries which are still party to the accord
designed to curb Iran's nuclear activity say they will help businesses bypass
the sanctions. But there are doubts how successful this will be.
US President Donald Trump withdrew the US from the nuclear
accord earlier this year, an agreement he called the "worst deal ever
negotiated".
It offered Iran sanctions relief in exchange for reducing
its nuclear development. The global nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, says that Iran
has complied with the agreement.
President Trump says that he wants to get Iran back to the
negotiating table.
His administration also says it wants to stop what it calls
Tehran's "malign" activities including cyber attacks, ballistic
missile tests, and support for terror groups and militias in the Middle East.
The president says his "maximum pressure" strategy
is working. "[Iran] wanted to take over the whole Middle East. Right now
they just want to survive," he told a rally in Tennessee, Reuters
reported.
The US reinstated a raft of sanctions in August, but
analysts say this latest round is by far the most significant.
More than 700 individuals, entities, vessels and aircraft
are now on the sanctions list, including major banks, oil exporters and shipping
companies.
In addition, the Brussels-based Swift network for making
international payments is expected to cut off links with targeted Iranian
institutions, isolating Iran from the international financial system.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the US aimed to reduce
Iranian oil sales to zero.
The Trump administration though has granted exemptions to
eight countries to continue importing Iranian oil, without naming them.
They are reported to include US allies Italy, India, Japan
and South Korea, along with Turkey, China and India.
The UK, Germany and France - which are among the five
countries still committed to the nuclear pact - have all objected to the
sanctions.
They have promised to support European firms that do
"legitimate business" with Iran and have set up an alternative
payment mechanism - or Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) - that will help companies
trade without facing US penalties.
However, analysts doubt this will materially lessen the
impact of sanctions on Iran, given the importance of the US to global trade.
Mr Pompeo said more than 100 big international companies had
withdrawn from Iran because of the looming sanctions.
Even if firms can use the SPV, any US company it does
business with could face punishment.
Another signatory to the nuclear deal, China, has said it
regrets the re-imposition of sanctions and that its lawful trade with Iran
should be respected.
Thousands of Iranians chanting "Death to America"
rallied on Sunday, rejecting calls for talks.
Even before the US sanctions were re-imposed, Iran's economy
has had a difficult year, with Iran's currency, the rial, plummeting against
the dollar, driving up the price of basic goods.
"I am scared. I am worried. I am desperate," a
teacher in the Iranian capital Tehran told Reuters late last week.
"I cannot even buy rice to feed my children or pay my
rent."
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-
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