BFF-72 Trump warns world against business with Iran as sanctions return

357

ZCZC

BFF-72

IRAN-US-DIPLOMACY-WRAP-UPDATE

Trump warns world against business with Iran as sanctions return

TEHRAN, Aug 7, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – US President Donald Trump warned
countries against doing business with Iran on Tuesday as he hailed the “most
biting sanctions ever imposed”, triggering a mix of anger, fear and defiance
in Tehran.

“The Iran sanctions have officially been cast. These are the most biting
sanctions ever imposed, and in November they ratchet up to yet another
level,” Trump wrote in an early morning tweet.

“Anyone doing business with Iran will NOT be doing business with the
United States. I am asking for WORLD PEACE, nothing less.”

Within hours of the sanctions taking effect, German automaker Daimler
said it was halting its business activities in Iran.

Trump’s withdrawal from a landmark 2015 nuclear agreement in May had
already spooked investors and triggered a run on the Iranian rial long before
nuclear-related sanctions went back into force.

“I feel like my life is being destroyed. Sanctions are already badly
affecting people’s lives. I can’t afford to buy food, pay the rent…” said a
construction worker on the streets of the capital.

The sanctions reimposed on Tuesday — targeting access to US banknotes
and key industries such as cars and carpets — were unlikely to cause
immediate economic turmoil.

Iran’s markets were actually relatively buoyant, with the rial
strengthening by 20 percent since Sunday after the government relaxed foreign
exchange rules and allowed unlimited, tax-free gold and currency imports.

But the second tranche on November 5 covering Iran’s vital oil sector
could be far more damaging — even if several key customers such as China,
India and Turkey have refused to significantly cut their purchases.

In a statement on Monday before the sanctions were reimposed, Trump
said: “The Iranian regime faces a choice.

“Either change its threatening, destabilising behaviour and reintegrate
with the global economy, or continue down a path of economic isolation.

“I remain open to reaching a more comprehensive deal that addresses the
full range of the regime’s malign activities, including its ballistic missile
programme and its support for terrorism,” Trump said.

But his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rouhani dismissed the idea of talks
while crippling sanctions were in effect.

“If you’re an enemy and you stab the other person with a knife, and then
you say you want negotiations, then the first thing you have to do is remove
the knife,” he told state television..

“They want to launch psychological warfare against the Iranian nation,”
Rouhani said. “Negotiations with sanctions doesn’t make sense.”

– ‘Legitimate business’ –

European governments are infuriated by Trump’s strategy, which leaves
their businesses in Iran faced with the threat of US legal penalties.

British Foreign Office Minister Alastair Burt told the BBC that the
“Americans have really not got this right”.

He said it was a commercial decision for companies whether to stay in
Iran, but that Britain believed the nuclear deal was important “not only to
the region’s security but the world’s security.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif told reporters the global
reaction to Trump’s move showed that the US was diplomatically “isolated”.
But many large European firms are leaving Iran for fear of US penalties, and
Trump warned of “severe consequences” for firms and individuals that
continued to do business with Iran.

Daimler said it had “suspended our already limited activities in Iran in
accordance with the applicable sanctions”.

There is also mounting pressure at home, where US hostility has helped
fuel long-running discontent over high prices, unemployment, water shortages
and the lack of political reform.

Those protests have proliferated over the past week, though verifiable
information is scarce due to heavy reporting restrictions.

– Poison cup –

Most Iranians see US hostility as a basic fact of life, so their
frustration is largely directed at their own leaders for not handling the
situation better.

“Prices are rising again, but the reason is government corruption, not
US sanctions,” said Ali, a 35-year-old decorator in Tehran.

Many hope and believe that Iran’s leaders will need to “drink the poison
cup” and negotiate with the US eventually.

There have been rumours that Trump and Rouhani could meet in New York in
September on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly — though Rouhani
reportedly rejected US overtures for a meeting at last year’s event.

Two countries that have welcomed the tough new US policy are Iran’s
regional rivals, Israel and Saudi Arabia.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed the renewed sanctions
as “an important moment for Israel, for the US, for the region, for the whole
world.”

Iran’s currency has lost around half its value since Trump announced the
US would withdraw from the nuclear pact.

But the last two days have seen an impressive 20 percent rally in the
value of the rial after the government announced new foreign exchange rules
and launched a corruption crackdown that included the arrest of the central
bank’s currency chief.

The new rules mean exchange bureaus will reopen after a disastrous
attempt to fix the value of the rial in April backfired spectacularly with
corrupt traders making a fortune out of a mushrooming black market.

BSS/AFP/RY/1653 hrs