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  • ISTANBUL: `Iran running out of alternate routes to bypass sanctions'

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 26 2012

    `Iran running out of alternate routes to bypass sanctions'

    26 August 2012 / GÃ-ZDE NUR DONAT , ANKARA


    The Iranian regime is running out of alternative routes to ease the
    pressure of the sanctions upon it, even though it is trying very hard
    to expand its banking foothold in ally countries, most significantly
    Armenia and Iraq, and to make behind-the-curtain deals on its
    petroleum and natural gas with many international actors, according to
    Middle East experts.


    Talks between Iran and the P5+1 (five permanent members of the UN
    Security Council, the United States, Russia, China, Britain and
    France, as well as Germany) in Moscow in June failed to end the
    standoff over Tehran's nuclear activities, including its enrichment of
    uranium, which Western nations fear is part of a bid for nuclear
    weapons capability.

    Iran is trying to conceal payments to and from foreign clients and
    deceive Western intelligence agencies trying to prevent it from
    expanding its nuclear and missile programs through its banking and
    trade relations, especially in Armenia and Iraq, international media
    outlets reported.

    Arif Keskin, a prominent Iran analyst, has told Sunday's Zaman that
    trying to bypass sanctions via Armenia and Iraq will not give any
    advantage to Iran, considering its ever-deteriorating economic
    situation.

    `If Iran could withstand the sanctions, its inflation rate would not
    rise that much. The crisis situation is worsening every day in the
    country,' Keskin claimed. He maintained that the rate of inflation in
    the country has risen to 200 percent, while the announced rate of
    inflation is only 44 percent.

    He also mentioned that Iran's prominent place in the Organization of
    the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has also deteriorated to a
    significant degree, with Iraqi oil exports now ranking highest after
    Saudi Arabia, displacing Iran. `As major purchasers of Iranian oil
    Japan and China had to decrease their trade with Iran, the help of its
    smaller buyers and its allies could not save the country from the drop
    in demand,' Keskin stated.

    Turkish oil and natural gas imports from Iran are also at a
    significant level, but Turkey has recently exerted efforts to
    diversify its oil trade, approaching countries such as Libya and Saudi
    Arabia. Turkey purchased more than 50 percent of its crude oil and 18
    percent of its natural gas from Iran, according to 2011 figures. But a
    report by the Energy Market Regulatory Agency (EPDK) in June showed
    that the Turkish crude oil purchases from Iran have decreased by 22
    percent.

    The United States has been trying to cease most of its trade with Iran
    since 1996 with a series of sanctions, intending to respond to Iran's
    nuclear program and its support for Hezbollah and Hamas. Observers say
    the Iranian people have had a modest standard of living for years,
    including forgoing luxury goods, due to those sanctions.

    However, the latest round of sanctions targeting the petroleum sector
    seems to have stricken the country in the heart. Rampant inflation,
    price hikes on food and the drop in foreign currency have rendered
    officials and the people helpless. Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah
    Ali Khamenei recently announced a `war economy' in the country due to
    the dire economic situation.

    Regarding Iran's trade with Armenia, an important ally for the mullah
    regime in the Caucasus, it includes an oil pipeline that Armenian news
    reports say should be finished in 2014 and requires some form of
    cross-border banking. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said
    that Iran's annual trade with Armenia is around $1 billion, according
    to Iranian news reports.

    Iran has used Iraqi banks to move large amounts of cash into the
    international banking system, prompting private US protests to
    Baghdad.

    Measures approved by the US Congress on Aug. 1 build on oil trade
    sanctions signed into law by President Barack Obama in December, which
    have prompted Japan, South Korea, India and others to slash purchases
    of Iranian oil.

    Also, the White House has issued a written statement mentioning an
    important step to hold accountable the institutions insisting on
    making financial transfers for Iranian banks under sanctions. The
    statement noted that US Department of the Treasury has singled out the
    Iraqi Elaf Islamic Bank and Chinese Kunlun Bank as part of a network
    of financial institutions and oil-smuggling operations, banning US
    firms from doing business with those banks.

    Iranian accounts in many Turkish banks have also been frozen since
    early 2012 due to those sanctions.

    Also in remarks to Sunday's Zaman, Assistant Professor Süleyman Elik,
    who teaches international relations at Ä°stanbul's Medeniyet
    University, emphasized that Turkey's trade relations with Iran have
    also been harmed due to the conflicting positions of the two countries
    on the Syrian crisis. `Eighty percent of the Iranian economy is in the
    hands of Revolutionary Guards. Actually those However these relations
    have been damaged to a significant degree due to tense relations with
    Turkey because of the Syrian crisis,' Elik said.

    Engaging in transactions with Iranian banks is not a violation of
    international sanctions as long as it is not linked to Iran's nuclear
    or missile programs or companies or individuals under US, EU or UN
    sanctions.

    US diplomats also say that Iran has been trying to develop financial
    channels focusing on countries like Malaysia, China, India and Brazil.

    In remarks to Sunday's Zaman, Necdet Pamir, an energy policy expert
    and World Energy Council Turkish National Committee board member,
    stated that Iran is a country that has survived decades of sanctions.
    `Even though the US and EU are implementing their sanctions overtly,
    many other countries including Norway, China and others are looking
    out for their trade and long-term interests there. None of them have
    an interest in bringing the Iranian regime to heel,' Pamir said.


    From: Baghdasarian
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