Shutting Off Iran’s Finances (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Arnold Ahlert 03/16/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/03/16/shutting-off-irans-finances/
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On Thursday, the European Union (EU) ordered the Society for
Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) to block
Iranian banks currently subjected to EU sanctions from using their
service. SWIFT is a financial transaction company used by almost
every bank around the world to send payment messages to each other.
Since global financial transactions are virtually impossible to
implement without SWIFT, the move represents the EU’s most determined
effort to date to convince Iran that its pursuit of nuclear weapons
is unacceptable. SWIFT announced it would comply with the order by
Saturday. The decision is no doubt being met with high anxiety from
diplomacy advocates. International sanctions have so far been
woefully unsuccessful, and options are dwindling. Economic isolation,
coupled with upcoming talks with the Iranian regime, have opponents
of military intervention scraping the bottom of the diplomatic barrel.
“This EU decision forces SWIFT to take action,” said Lazaro Campos,
SWIFT’s chief executive. “Disconnecting banks is an extraordinary and
unprecedented step for SWIFT. It is a direct result of international
and multilateral action to intensify financial sanctions against
Iran.”
SWIFT was set up in Belgium by banks in 1973. In 1987, non-bank
financial institutions were allowed to join, followed by corporate
customers of banks in 2000. The service has more than 10,000 users in
210 countries, and sends approximately 17 million messages every day.
It is overseen by the central banks of Belgium, Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, the
United States, Switzerland, Sweden, and the European Central Bank. It
neither holds nor transfers money, but provides a common language and
a secure private system allowing banks to communicate payment
messages to each other.
Yet the system, while effective, is far from perfect. On the plus
side, it will hinder Iran’s ability to sell as much oil as it is
currently selling, and may even force the nation to sell oil at below-
market prices as a result. Financial institutions outside the SWIFT
umbrella may hesitate to cooperate with Iran out of fear of being
banned from doing business with other nations. Furthermore, the ban
could force Iran to use hard assets like gold to complete
transactions, making trading inefficient and risky.
On the minus side, some banks, notably those in China and India that
are still planning to purchase Iranian oil, could communicate with
Iran outside the network. And since SWIFT outsources some of its
messaging to regional contractors, it remains possible that Iran
could co-mingle its oil with oil that flows through international
pipelines, masking its origin. Iran could also accept payments for
transactions in a bank outside the country, purchase goods and
services in that country, and import them back into Iran.
Some critics contend the move could backfire, forcing oil prices
higher and undermining SWIFT’s reputation. Others worry that ordinary
Iranians, even those hostile to the current regime, will be cut off
from money sent to them by relatives living outside the country.
In addition, there is currently a lack of coordination between the EU
and the United States. The EU measure only affects sanctioned Iranian
banks, and 30 of those banks and their subsidiaries have been cut off
as a result. On the other hand, the U.S. Congress has proposed
legislation that seeks to ban transactions with any Iranian banks.
The U.S. currently bans 23 Iranian banks, the bulk of which are
covered by the EU ban. But congressional lawmakers contend at least
20 additional banks are being used to underwrite both Iran’s nuclear
program trade and provide support for terrorist groups. According to
congressional aides, the new law could subject some European
companies to penalties and sanctions, including banning them from the
U.S. financial system, even if they fully comply with EU rules. Thus,
the U.S., while appreciative of this latest move by the EU, seeks to
pressure Europe to go even further. The EU does intend to ratchet up
the pressure in July, when an embargo on the importation of Iranian
oil will be implemented.
Iran has already been feeling such pressure, even before yesterday’s
announcement by the EU, as the sanctions already imposed on that
nation since November have had some effect. Reuters revealed that
Iran is stockpiling food to blunt their effects. Ships carrying at
least 396,832 tons of grain are lined up to unload, reflecting a
frantic level of shopping in which Iran has purchased what amounts to
a year’s supply of wheat in a little over one month. In order to work
around the sanctions, they are paying premium prices for the
shipments, and using non-dollar currencies such as Japanese yen and
Russian rubles to pay for them.
“There is no doubt in my mind it is geopolitical hedging. They are
trying to get as much (wheat) as they can in the country to blunt the
effect of any further escalation in international sanctions,” said
Rabobank commodities analyst Nick Higgins. “I think they hit the
market hard and early and that from their perspective, limited the
chances that anyone could react to such large purchases.” Food
shipments are not targeted by sanctions, but the Iranian government
is well aware that the price of food as well as the collapse of the
local currency could fuel the same kind of unrest that has roiled
other Middle East nations. Rory Lamrock, intelligence analyst with
security firm AKE confirms that analysis. “If left unchecked,
significant hikes in food and basic commodity prices on the ground
are likely to be a key source of social unrest,” he noted.
On March 6th, the EU announced that a new round of negotiations
between Iran and six nations, the US, UK, France, Germany, China and
Russia, will be resuming soon. EU foreign policy chief Catherine
Aston said it was time for “real progress.” Real progress reportedly
consists of a joint request that Iran freeze production of uranium
enriched to 20% purity (a level just below weapons-grade), and then
ship its stockpile of the nuclear fuel to a third country. In
addition, it is likely they will demand greater access to Iranian
nuclear facilities by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
How much teeth will the move by SWIFT add to the equation? According
to its annual report, 19 Iranian member banks and 25 financial
institutions sent and received 2 million messages through SWIFT in
2010. This is SWIFT’s first expulsion of any institution in its 39
years of existence, and its effect is being likened to being expelled
from “what is the financial equivalent of the United Nations”
according to Mark Dubowitz, a sanctions specialist in Washington, who
advised U.S. lawmakers on the SWIFT legislation.
Yet as Foreign Policy reveals, the European Central Bank (ECB)
guidelines for SWIFT inadvertently demonstrate the limitations of the
system: The guidelines specifically bar access to SWIFT institutions
that engage in “money laundering and the financing of terrorism[.]”
Over the years, Iran has become quite adept at money-laundering. Last
November, Iran was designated as a “Primary Money-Laundering
Concern,” by the U.S. government, which imposed new sanctions on
Iran’s energy sector. Furthermore, a report titled “Time for the
Collapse,” reveals a strategy envisioned by Iranian military elites
to destabilize the West through terror, drugs — and money laundering.
Moreover, critics contend that SWIFT has breached the sanctions
requirements, violated both U.S. and European laws and its own
corporate rules in facilitating Iranian transactions. Taking such
realities into consideration, it would seem the latest move by the EU
may be less effective than advertised.
Nevertheless, the announcement has had an effect on overseas Iranian
businessmen, who are shocked. “It will make life even more difficult
for us than before, because this is like our lifeline to the outside
being cut,” said Naser Shaker, who owns an oil and gas trading
company in Dubai. Morteza Masoumzadeh, a member of the executive
committee of the Iranian Business Council in Dubai, and managing
director of the Jumbo Line Shipping Agency, called the
news “devastating” and predicted “the collapse of many banking
relations and many businesses.”
Yet even as these moves occur and Iranian businessmen despair, the
ultimate question arises once again: can sanctions work? If history
is relevant, the answer is no. Nothing up to this point has dissuaded
Iran from pursuing its nuclear ambitions. Moreover, a regime with
religiously inspired visions of facilitating an apocalypse they
believe will engender the return of the Twelfth or Hidden Imam hardly
sounds like the “rational actors” many wishful thinkers in the West
want them to be. Add the reality that, despite their participation in
the latest round of negotiations, Russia and China have been more
than willing to use Iran as a counterbalance to U.S. interests and
that the Iranian mullahs have a track record of ruthlessness in
dealing with internal opposition, and it becomes far more likely the
current regime will once again persevere.
As for negotiations, political reality suggests that Iran is not the
only entity interested in buying time. The Obama administration would
like nothing better than to avoid any serious confrontation with Iran
until after the 2012 election. The president is already getting beat
up in polls by Americans blaming him (rightly or wrongly) for higher
gas prices that would skyrocket if hostilities ensued. No doubt Mr.
Obama is also hoping that this latest move by the EU and the upcoming
one by the U.S. Congress will persuade Israel to give non-military
options one more chance to succeed.
Ironically, the severity of these sanctions may undercut such
political calculations. If Iran survives its isolation and/or
continues its pursuit of nuclear weapons, only two realistic options
remain: a military confrontation — or a nuclear-armed Iran.
Meanwhile, the clock continues to wind down. (Copyright © 2012
FrontPageMagazine.com 03/16/12)
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