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(European) Banks Join Curbs On Iran
The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 5-23-3006 | Alec Russell

Posted on 05/22/2006 6:05:12 PM PDT by blam

Banks join US curbs on Iran

By Alec Russell in Washington
(Filed: 23/05/2006)

The Bush administration has persuaded four of Europe's largest banks to start breaking off contacts with Iran as Washington pushes for anti-Iranian sanctions by "the back door", it emerged yesterday.

Citing anti-terrorist laws the United States Treasury and the State Department are strengthening their efforts for banks in the Middle East, America and Europe to cut their links with Iran.

President Ahmadinejad's regime is being hit with ‘smart sanctions’

Banks with branches and headquarters on US soil have in the past faced huge fines for dealing with countries that Washington has sought to isolate.

The drive to punish Iran for its refusal to co-operate over its nuclear programme has intensified as administration officials are reluctantly accepting that the prospects for United Nations sanctions are bleak.

Four European banks, UBS and Credit Suisse of Switzerland, ABN Amro of the Netherlands and HSBC in London have all started to reduce their links to Teheran, the New York Times reported yesterday.

"We are seeing banks and other institutions reassessing their ties to Iran," Stuart Levey, the treasury's undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence told the newspaper.

"They are asking themselves if they really want to be handling business for entities owned by a government engaged in the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and support for terrorism."

Washington had hoped that the UN Security Council would impose sanctions on Iran for its failure to comply with demands for it to stop its nuclear enrichment programme.

But Russia, with the tacit support of China, has been adamantly opposed to sanctions. Attempts two weeks ago to end the impasse and reach agreement on a UN resolution ended in failure.

The Bush administration now hopes that it can exert pressure on Iran by imposing "smart sanctions" targeted at officials and particular branches of the government, via a "coalition of the willing".

The EU 3, Germany, France and Britain, which have been leading the negotiations with Iran, sent their latest "carrots and sticks" proposals for breaking the deadlock to Washington last week.

Bush administration officials are adamant that Iran cannot be promised a Middle Eastern security "framework" in return for giving up its nuclear activities.

Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, flatly rejected such a proposal and also denied that the EU 3 had suggested a security guarantee for Iran.

"Security assurances are not on the table," she told a television news channel. "It's obvious that in addition to the nuclear issue, we have other issues with Iran.

"We have a state in Iran that is devoted to the destruction of Israel. We have a state in Iran that meddles in the peace process in the Middle East."

With the backing of senior Democrats, some European officials are adamant that ultimately America will have to abandon its long-standing opposition to bilateral talks with Iran.

The idea of talks has been revived following the unexpected letter earlier this month from President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran to President George W Bush.

The letter was more of a rambling diatribe than a negotiation, but it revived speculation among foreign policy doves in Washington that a "grand bargain" could be the best solution for the confrontation.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: banks; curbs; european; iran; join; us

1 posted on 05/22/2006 6:05:15 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam

No, they are realists and any investment in Iran for longer that 6 months is looking sketchy. The Europeans had no problem funding Saddam, but those investments had a sudden loss of collateral in 03.


2 posted on 05/22/2006 6:10:16 PM PDT by When do we get liberated? (( Multi-culturism has to go for a dirt nap.))
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To: blam
The letter was more of a rambling diatribe than a negotiation, but it revived speculation among foreign policy doves in Washington that a "grand bargain" could be the best solution for the confrontation.

It was not a rambling diatribe as interpreted by Muslims in the Middle East and elsewhere. It was an invitation to Bush and the West to surrender and accept the rule of Allah.
3 posted on 05/22/2006 6:27:49 PM PDT by gpapa (Boost FR Traffic! Make FR your home page!)
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