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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East : Iran
US imposes unilateral sanctions on Iran: One step closer to
war
By Bill Van Auken
26 October 2007
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In an act unprecedented in the history of international relations,
Washington on Thursday unilaterally imposed harsh and potentially
crippling economic sanctions against Irans main uniformed
security force, as well as against more than 20 Iranian companies
and the countrys three major banks.
The sanctions, announced by US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, represent a deliberate
provocation aimed at precluding any negotiated settlement to the
dispute over Irans nuclear program and making a US war against
the country all but inevitable.
In announcing the measureswhich are considerably more
punitive than those imposed by Washington during the seizure of
the US embassy which followed the 1979 Iranian revolutionRice
said they were designed to increase the costs to Iran of
its irresponsible behavior.
The sanctions are directed in the first instance against Irans
Revolutionary Guard Corps, which the US government has now branded
as proliferators of weapons of mass destruction, and
its Quds Force, which has been labeled a supporter of terrorism.
The Revolutionary Guards, a force of some 125,000, is responsible
for law enforcement, border patrol and resistance against foreign
attack. It also organizes Irans peoples militia, providing
military training to some 12 million volunteers.
The Quds Force is a special unit within the Revolutionary Guards
that handles overseas operations. It has acted in a number of
countries with the direct approval of Washington.
In Bosnia, it provided arms to the US-backed Muslim government;
in Afghanistan, it aided the forces fighting the Soviet military
and then supported those fighting the Taliban; in Iraq, it assisted
Kurdish guerrillas against the Baathist regime of Saddam Hussein.
Elsewhere, it has aided organizations opposed by the US, principally
those resisting Israeli aggression, such as Hezbollah, the mass
Shia movement in Lebanon, and organizations in the occupied Palestinian
territories.
By imposing these designations upon the official armed forces
of a sovereign state, the Bush administration is carrying out
a brazen intervention into the internal affairs of Iran. In so
doing, it is setting out a pseudo-legal framework for war, spelling
out two alternative pretextsweapons of mass destruction
and terrorismwhich are identical to those contrived and
propagated in preparation for the unprovoked US invasion of Iraq.
Washington has charged that Iran is pursuing its nuclear program
in order to construct a nuclear weapon. Tehran has denied this
charge, insisting that it is utilizing the program for peaceful
purposes, in particular, the development of an alternative power
source.
In regard to the second casus belli, the Bush administration
and some senior US military commanders have repeatedly accused
Iran and the Quds Force, in particular, of arming, funding and
training forces in Iraq responsible for attacks on US occupation
troops.
Washington has yet to provide concrete evidence to back these
charges and has produced no one that it can credibly claim is
an Iranian agent engaged in these alleged activities. Tehran has
denied responsibility for the attacks, which it points out are
carried out in their great majority by Sunni resistance fighters,
not the Shia movements with which the Iranians have enjoyed a
longstanding relationship.
The sanctions against the Revolutionary Guards are aimed at
inflicting significant damage to the Iranian economy. The Guards
role in Iran includes far-ranging economic activities.
Its engineering unit, for example is involved in a number of
major projects, ranging from a $2 billion contract for the development
of the countrys main gas field, to a $1.3 billion contract
for a new pipeline directed to Pakistan, to the construction of
a Tehran metro extension, a high-speed rail link between the capital
and Isfahan, shipping ports and a major dam.
The immediate impact of sanctions allowing the freezing of
assets in US banks or barring US businesses from economic ties
to the Iranian Guards, as well as the named Iranian bank and other
companies, is negligible, given that Washingtons imposition
of sanctions in response to the 1979 revolution that overthrew
the US-backed dictatorship of the Shah had already largely frozen
American banks and corporations out of the Iranian market.
Blackmailing foreign banks and corporations
The aim of these measureswhich are far more sweeping
than anything the US could hope to get passed in the United Nationsis
to blackmail foreign banks and corporations with the threat that
their continued operations inside Iran could lead to American-imposed
penalties and exclusion from the US market.
Treasury Secretary Paulson called upon responsible banks
and companies around the world to cut off all ties with
the named bank, companies and all affiliates of the Revolutionary
Guards. US officials have stressed that the Guards ties
are so widespread that any economic relations whatsoever with
Iran carry with them the threat of US retaliation.
The US action won quick endorsement from the British government
of Prime Minister Gordon Brown, which, according to some press
reports, has also signaled its willingness to go along with eventual
US air strikes against Iran. Brown appears prepared to play the
same role that Blair played in paving the way for the invasion
of Iraq, by pushing for the United Nations Security Council to
impose another set of sanctions, a move that is opposed by Russia
and China, both of which have substantial interests in Iran and
hold veto power on the council. In 2003, Bush invoked the failure
of the UN to pass a resolution authorizing military action as
the pretext for unilaterally launching the US war.
Other European powers, however, were more cool towards Washingtons
diktat. German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeir said Thursday
that any decision on further sanctions against Iran should await
an evaluation of Irans willingness to answer more questions
from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). German companies
exported $5.7 billion worth of goods to Iran last year, while
the German Economics Ministry granted the government in Tehran
$1.2 billion in export credit guarantees.
Irans new nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, joined by
his predecessor, Ali Larijani, held two days of talks this week
with the European Unions foreign policy director, Javier
Solana, in Rome to discuss Tehrans nuclear program. At the
end of the talks Wednesday, the Iranian negotiators joined Solana
and Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi in a joint press conference
in Rome. Both sides described the talks as constructive,
while Prodi insisted that dialogue is the only way to find
a solution for Irans nuclear program in the UN Security
Council and Italy encourages this way.
Russian President Vladimir Putin voiced a harsh reaction to
the US sanctions. Meeting with European Union leaders at a summit
in Portugal, he insisted that the controversy over Irans
nuclear program should be resolved through negotiations, along
the lines of those pursued with North Korea.
Why worsen the situation and bring it to a dead end by
threatening sanctions or military action? Putin said. In
an obvious characterization of Bush, he continued, Running
around like a madman with a razor blade, waving it around, is
not the best way to resolve the situation.
Iran dismissed the US sanctions. The hostile policies
of America against the respectful Iranian nation and our legal
organizations are against international regulations and have no
value, said Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini.
Such ridiculous measures cannot rescue the Americans from
the crisis they themselves have created in Iraq.
Speaking at a conference on Privatization in Iran
held in Dubai for foreign investors, the head of Irans Chamber
of Commerce, Industries and Mines, Mohammad Nahvandian, said that
while the sanctions could lead to an increase in costs,
they could not disturb or stop Irans massive trade
relations with other countries.
The principal aim of the sanctions, however, appears to be
not so much economic as political. By increasing tensions, they
are designed to slam the door on any negotiated settlement of
the nuclear dispute and pave the way for US military action.
In that sense they are of a piece with the steady escalation
of threats against Iran, including Bushs warning last week
about World War III and Cheneys threat last
Sunday that Iran would face serious consequences if
it continued on its present course, and that the US would not
stand by as a terror-supporting state fulfills its most
aggressive ambitions.
Fresh evidence of US war preparations against Iran came in
the details of the nearly $200 billion budget request sent to
Congress last Monday for funding the continuation of the wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Included was nearly $88 million for fitting bunker-busting
bombs onto B-2 stealth bombers. Some lawmakers and congressional
aides pointed out that there is little use for such weapons in
the current counterinsurgency campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan,
and that the bombs were in all likelihood intended for attacking
Irans underground nuclear facilities.
As the Bush administration prepares for yet another war, the
Democrats in Congress have once again emerged as willing accomplices.
The administrations imposition of sanctions was actually
prefigured by legislation passed in the Democratic-led Houseby
an overwhelming 397-16 votethat would impose sanctions on
non-US energy companies doing business in Iran.
While Democratic leaders claimed the measure was intended to
cut off funding for Irans nuclear program, its real intention
is evident. American oil conglomerates frozen out of the Iranian
market want to deny their competitors any advantage.
In the final analysis, the propaganda about nuclear threats
and terrorism notwithstanding, a US war against Iran would be
launched to impose American capitalisms hegemonic control
over the strategic oil reserves of the Persian Gulf.
See Also:
US militarism threatens to unleash regional
conflagration
[23 October 2007]
Bush invokes threat of World War
III
[19 October 2007]
US general fires a new propaganda salvo
against Iran
[9 October 2007]
New Yorker article points to advanced
US preparations for war on Iran
[3 October 2007]
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