Lagniappe
Galina Ivanova: Is America using Iran
in a dangerous game
with Russia?
On October 25, 2007, the Bush administration announced sweeping
new sanctions against Iran. These are the harshest since the
takeover of the U.S. Embassy in 1979 as part of the Islamic
Revolution led by Ayatollah Khomeini. America claims that Tehran
supports terrorism in the Middle East, exports missiles and
is engaging in a nuclear build up.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, joined at a State Department
news conference by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, said the
moves against Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps, an element of
its defense ministry and three of its largest banks are designed
to punish Tehran for weapons proliferation and alleged support
of terrorist organizations in Iraq and the Middle East.
The sanctions will cut off more than 20 Iranian entities, including
individuals and companies owned or controlled by the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), from the American financial
system and will likely have ripple effects throughout the international
banking community.
State-owned banks Bank Melli, Bank Mellat and Bank Saderat were
named supporters of global terrorist groups for their activities
in Afghanistan, Iraq and the Middle East.
Iran's Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and its Ministry of
Defense and Armed Forces Logistics were designated proliferators
of weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile technology.
The IRGC is the largest component of Iran's military and has
influence in business and other spheres. The defense ministry
entity is the parent organization for Iran's aerospace and ballistic
missile operations.
The Revolutionary Guards organization, formed to safeguard Iran's
1979 Islamic revolution, has pushed well beyond its military
roots, and now owns car factories and construction firms and
operates newspaper groups and oil fields.
Current and former members now hold a growing role across the
country's government and economy, sometimes openly and other
times in shadows.
The guards have gained a particularly big role in the country's
oil and gas industry in recent years, as the national oil company
has signed several contracts with a guards-operated construction
company. Some have been announced publicly, including a $2 billion
deal in 2006 to develop part of the important Pars gas field.
Now numbering about 125,000 members, they report directly to
the supreme leader and officially handle internal security. The
small Quds Force wing is thought to operate overseas, having
helped to create the militant Hezbollah group in 1982 in Lebanon
and to arm Bosnian Muslims during the Balkan wars.
The administration
accuses the Quds Force of sending fighters and deadly roadside
bombs, mortars and rockets to kill American
troops in Iraq in recent years — allegations that Iran
denies.
These sanctions come in the wake of a strong show of support
of Iran by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Russia and the US
are at odds over a system to defend against Iranian missile attacks.
The US wants the system based in Poland and the Czech Republic,
Russia wants it in Azerbaijan, and does not appear to be as convinced
as the US as to why it is needed. Putin has also encouraged oil
producing nations such as Iran to bolster their militaries against
possible US aggression.
Galina
Ivanova of Russian Election 2008 blog. Petroleumworld does
not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This commentary was originally published in Russian Election
2008, on October 25, 2007 ( http://russianelection2008.blogspot.com ). Petroleumworld reprint this article in the interest of our
readers.
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Petroleumworld
News 10/26/07
Copyright© 2007
Galina
Ivanova. All rights reserved.
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