US
Congress bids to punish foreign oil firms linked to Iran
By
Jitendra Joshi
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com
06 27 07
US legislation aiming to punish foreign energy
companies that do business with Iran took a step forward Tuesday as lawmakers
attacked the Islamic republic's nuclear drive and "terrorism."
The foreign affairs panel of the House of Representatives passed the proposed
law by 37 votes to one, with Democrats and Republicans alike accusing Iran of
using energy investment for nefarious ends.
"Foreign investment in Iran equals money for terrorism and attacks on Americans," Democrat
Gary Ackerman said.
"Investment in Iran's petroleum sector enables that country to pursue nuclear
weapons, to arm insurgents fighting American troops, and to underwrite Hezbollah
and Hamas," he said.
The United States already has a slew of economic sanctions on Iran dating from
the 1979 Islamic revolution.
The United Nations has also toughened sanctions on Iran to punish its refusal
to halt uranium enrichment, which the West suspects is aimed at building a nuclear
bomb.
But the new bill would close a loophole that has allowed the administration of
President George W. Bush to waive sanctions against foreign energy companies
that continue to court lucrative deals in Iran.
In the absence of the US energy giants, European and Japanese companies have
profited from the exploration and distribution of oil and natural gas from Iran.
The House committee's chairman, Tom Lantos, accused the Bush administration of "abusing
its waiver authority" by never sanctioning any foreign oil company that
has invested in Iran.
"By now every single European leader fully understands, and acknowledges,
that Iran is hell-bent on acquiring nuclear weapons," he added.
"It
is time for Europe to cease investing in Iran's energy industry,
and our legislation will facilitate that result."
Supporters of the bill pointed to an increasing reluctance by European and Japanese
banks to deal with Iran's financial system, after the US Treasury blacklisted
two leading Iranian lenders.
Last week, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson urged US allies to help cut off Iran's
banks from the global financial system, accusing the Iranian Revolutionary Guard
of funding and training Middle East militant groups.
The
bill under debate in the House would designate the Revolutionary
Guard a "terrorist
organization."
Lantos said that Iran's foremost military arm was "a major base of support" for
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and "owns huge economic enterprises in
Iran."
Several members of the House committee, invoking the war in Iraq, said they wanted
to tighten sanctions to give diplomacy and not military power the best chance
of success against Iran.
" We want sanctions, not bullets," Republican House member Chris Smith
said.
The committee's vote means the legislation can move to debate in the full House,
where Lantos said it enjoyed support from about 300 of the 435 members. A Senate
version must also be passed before the bill can become law.
Last month, Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama introduced a similar
bill in the Senate encouraging investors to cash out of projects that benefit
Iran.
If the twin bills become law, the legislation would require the US government
to a compile a list every six months of companies that have an investment of
more than 20 million dollars in Iran's energy sector.
Obama accused Tehran of using lucrative energy revenues "to build its
nuclear program and to fund terrorist groups that export its militaristic
and radical
ideology to Iraq and throughout the Middle East."
" Pressuring companies to cut their financial ties with Iran is critical
to ensuring that sanctions have their intended result," he said.
AFP 26 2238 GMT 06 07
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