The US has announced that India is among eight countries granted
“temporary allotments” from sanctions targeting Iran’s crude oil exports
that went into effect on Monday Nov 05,2018
Iran’s Chabahar port, which India has helped develop and operates as a gateway to Afghanistan and Central Asia, was also apparently exempted as it didn’t figure in a comprehensive list of sanctioned individuals and entities released by the US treasury department.
People involved in negotiations said a waiver for Chabahar was part of the “arrangement”. A response to a request for clarity was awaited from the administration.
Announcing the sanctions, secretary of state Mike Pompeo warned: “I promise you that doing business with Iran in defiance of our sanctions will ultimately be a much more painful business decision than pulling out of Iran and…being connected to Iran entirely.”
He added, “It should be noted that if a company evades our sanctions regime and secretly continues sanctionable commerce in the Islamic Republic, the US will levy severe, swift penalties on it, including potential sanctions.”
US officials indicated on Friday that India would be among the eight countries that were granted the
“Significant Reduction Exemptions (SREs)” under the second and final round of sanctions that target Iran’s shipping and financial sectors. The others exempted from sanctions are China, Italy, Greece, South Korea, Japan, Turkey and Taiwan.
Pompeo said each of the eight countries has demonstrated significant reductions in crude imports from Iran and the “temporary allotments” were granted in view of “specific circumstances” and to “ensure a well-supplied oil market”.
“We continue negotiations to get all nations to zero,” he said. In an interview on Sunday, Pompeo hadn’t answered a question on whether the US had a firm commitment from India and China that they would stop all Iranian crude purchases in six months. “Watch what we do,” he had said.
The US announced sanctions against more than 700 individuals, entities, aircraft, and vessels. “Over 300 of those sanctions are new targets,” said treasury secretary Steve Mnuchin, who accompanied Pompeo at the announcement. He said hundreds of previously sanctioned individuals and entities that were granted relief under the Iran nuclear deal in 2015 were being re-listed.
The US has previously said these temporary exemptions are being granted only against evidence that countries have already significantly cut Iranian crude imports and to help them go to zero for as long as US sanctions are in force.
Iran’s Chabahar port, which India has helped develop and operates as a gateway to Afghanistan and Central Asia, was also apparently exempted as it didn’t figure in a comprehensive list of sanctioned individuals and entities released by the US treasury department.
People involved in negotiations said a waiver for Chabahar was part of the “arrangement”. A response to a request for clarity was awaited from the administration.
Announcing the sanctions, secretary of state Mike Pompeo warned: “I promise you that doing business with Iran in defiance of our sanctions will ultimately be a much more painful business decision than pulling out of Iran and…being connected to Iran entirely.”
He added, “It should be noted that if a company evades our sanctions regime and secretly continues sanctionable commerce in the Islamic Republic, the US will levy severe, swift penalties on it, including potential sanctions.”
US officials indicated on Friday that India would be among the eight countries that were granted the
“Significant Reduction Exemptions (SREs)” under the second and final round of sanctions that target Iran’s shipping and financial sectors. The others exempted from sanctions are China, Italy, Greece, South Korea, Japan, Turkey and Taiwan.
Pompeo said each of the eight countries has demonstrated significant reductions in crude imports from Iran and the “temporary allotments” were granted in view of “specific circumstances” and to “ensure a well-supplied oil market”.
“We continue negotiations to get all nations to zero,” he said. In an interview on Sunday, Pompeo hadn’t answered a question on whether the US had a firm commitment from India and China that they would stop all Iranian crude purchases in six months. “Watch what we do,” he had said.
The US announced sanctions against more than 700 individuals, entities, aircraft, and vessels. “Over 300 of those sanctions are new targets,” said treasury secretary Steve Mnuchin, who accompanied Pompeo at the announcement. He said hundreds of previously sanctioned individuals and entities that were granted relief under the Iran nuclear deal in 2015 were being re-listed.
The US has previously said these temporary exemptions are being granted only against evidence that countries have already significantly cut Iranian crude imports and to help them go to zero for as long as US sanctions are in force.
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