By Gram Slattery and Ryan Patrick Jones
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Treasury Division introduced recent sanctions on Wednesday on over 115 Iran-linked people, entities and vessels, in an indication the Trump administration is doubling down on its “most stress” marketing campaign after bombing Tehran’s key nuclear websites in June.
The sanctions broadly goal the transport pursuits of Mohammad Hossein Shamkhani, the son of Ali Shamkhani, who’s himself an adviser to Supreme Chief Supreme Chief Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The U.S. Treasury described the transfer as essentially the most vital Iran-related sanctions motion since 2018, throughout President Donald Trump’s first administration.
In keeping with Treasury, Shamkhani controls an unlimited community of container ships and tankers by way of a fancy net of intermediaries that promote Iranian and Russian oil and different items all through the world. Treasury accused Shamkhani of utilizing private connections and corruption in Tehran to generate tens of billions of {dollars} in income, a lot of which is used to prop up the Iranian regime.
Total, the brand new sanctions goal 15 transport companies, 52 vessels, 12 people and 53 entities concerned in sanctions evasion in 17 nations, starting from Panama to Italy to Hong Kong. A U.S. official mentioned the brand new transfer mustn’t disrupt world oil markets because it was tailor-made to hit particular dangerous actors.
The European Union sanctioned Shamkhani earlier in July, citing his function within the Russian oil commerce.
A U.S. official mentioned that Wednesday’s motion would affect each Russia and Iran, however the motion was targeted on Iran.
“From our perspective, given the place this particular person suits, given his connection to the Supreme Chief and his father’s earlier sanctions actions, given the Iran-related authorities, it is critically vital to emphasise that that is an Iran motion that’s significant and really impactful,” the official mentioned.
Ali Shamkhani, Mohammad Hossein Shamkhani’s father, was sanctioned by the US in 2020.
(Reporting by Gram Slattery and Ryan JonesEditing by Nick Zieminski)
