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U.S. Punishes 13 Companies for Iran Deals
Wade Boese
A common Bush administration refrain is that foreign companies can
either do business with the United States or rogue regimes,
but not both. The United States underscored that message April 1 by
imposing sanctions on 13 foreign companies for trading with Iran,
while waiving penalties on six Russian companies which Washington
says have mended their ways.
Sanctions were imposed on five companies from China, two from Macedonia,
two from Russia, and one each from Belarus, North Korea, Taiwan, and
the United Arab Emirates. The companies were said to have exported
items that appear on international arms export control regime lists
or that could aid Irans production of missiles or chemical,
biological, or nuclear weapons. Tehran is currently under intense
international scrutiny for illegal nuclear activities exposed last
year.
A Department of State official told Arms Control Today April 22 that
Iran is aggressively seeking imports for all of its covert weapons
programs. Because there is no expectation that Iran will stop trying
to procure such items, the official said the focus must be on cutting
off supply.
The newly sanctioned companies, some
of which have been sanctioned previously, are prohibited from
doing business with or receiving aid, arms, or other defense goods
from the U.S. government for a two-year period.
The action has drawn some reproofs from the targeted countries. Russias
Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced April 3 that Russia rejects
the very principle of the imposition by one state of sanctions on
some structures of other states.
It is not apparent that any of the sanctioned companies have dealings
with the U.S. government, but the Bush administration still views
the penalties as valuablean assessment amply illustrated by
the fact that it has imposed proliferation sanctions nearly 80 times.
In contrast, the Clinton administration averaged about eight sanctions
per year, according to June 2003 congressional testimony by Undersecretary
of State for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton.
U.S. officials insist that, even if a company has few ties with Washington,
sanctions may shame another government to clamp down on companies
under its control or dissuade other companies from doing business
with the sanctioned party.
In a March
12 interview with Arms Control Today, Paula DeSutter, the
assistant secretary of state for verification and compliance, said
that sanctions force countries into less effective acquisition
routes. She cited Libyas problems with its former chemical
weapons program as evidence. When the equipment came and wasnt
what they needed, they really didnt have a complaint mechanism,
DeSutter explained.
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