http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Asian_Economy/MD27Dk01.html

Iran banks on East to evade sanctions
By Avi Jorisch 

As  <http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Asian_Economy/MD27Dk01.html> the United
States and its allies continue to pressure Iran through targeted
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Asian_Economy/MD27Dk01.html> economic
sanctions in an effort to force the Islamic Republic to abandon what is
suspected to be a nuclear weapons
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Asian_Economy/MD27Dk01.html> program, Asian
countries such as China, South Korea and Malaysia are aiding and abetting
Iran's nuclear program by providing it with access to international
financial markets and the ability to purchase dual-use nuclear materiel. 

As a high-ranking Iranian customs official pointed out this month, Iran is
increasingly dependent on Asian
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Asian_Economy/MD27Dk01.html> imports for the
health of its economy. If the international sanctions regime is to have a
chance of succeeding, Asian countries will have to close Iranian banks
openly operating in their jurisdictions to curb the Islamic



  
Republic's ability to obtain illicit commodities; otherwise, the sanctions
will ultimately fail. 

The United Nations, the European Union and the United States have taken
steps to isolate Iranian banks that are suspected of financially
facilitating the purchase of illegal goods via the international financial
system. The United Nations, for example, has blacklisted four Iranian
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Asian_Economy/MD27Dk01.html> financial
institutions for their role in proliferating weapons of mass destruction -
the Sepah, Melli and Mellat banks, and the First East Export Bank of Iran.
Three of the four operate in Asia: Bank Melli is in Hong Kong, First East
Export Bank in Labuan, Malaysia, and Bank Mellat in Seoul, South Korea. 

Elsewhere around the world, more than 80
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Asian_Economy/MD27Dk01.html> financial
institutions - including such giants as
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Asian_Economy/MD27Dk01.html> Credit Suisse and
Deutsche Bank - have cut off or significantly reduced their relationship
with the Islamic Republic. More specifically, major international financial
institutions that once provided credit lines to Iran's commodities industry
have stopped. In particular, Iran is finding it increasingly difficult to
get banks to process oil and gas payments, which represent about 80% of the
country's export revenue. 

Unfortunately, a number of Asian banks, in addition to the ones named above,
are reportedly continuing to do business with Iran. In South Korea, Woori
Bank and the Industrial Bank of Korea are clearing oil payments. In China,
Yinzhou Bank is reportedly doing business with many of Iran's 30 banks,
clearing payments and providing letters of credit. 

Iran is also increasingly looking to the east for trading partners, and
during the past 12 months it has vastly increased its Asian trade, importing
US$64.3 billion worth of commodities - a healthy 15% increase compared to
the previous 12 months - and exporting $32.6 billion worth of domestically
manufactured agricultural oil products (excluding crude oil), according to
Iranian customs director Abbas Memarnejad. Asia was responsible for 61% of
the imports, while Europe accounted for only 34%. 

Economic relations between Iran and China, South Korea and Malaysia are
significant. In 2009, the People's Republic emerged as Iran's top economic
partner, with trade totaling around $21.2 billion. Chinese companies supply
Iran with 13% of its imports, approximately $7.9 billion per annum. In
addition, there are over 100 Chinese state companies operating in Iran,
where they  <http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Asian_Economy/MD27Dk01.html>
invest heavily in the energy sector. 

The economic relationship between South Korea and Iran was valued at $10
billion in 2008, and Iran remains South Korea's fourth-largest supplier of
crude oil. Iran and Malaysia have mostly cooperated in the energy realm,
with Malaysian companies involved in developing the Resalat oil field in the
Persian Gulf. As a result of US pressure, however, Malaysia's state-owned
Petronas oil company stopped gasoline shipments to Iran in March 2010. 

Some of Iran's Asian trade is illicit. Nearly 200 front companies and other
entities linked to Iran's efforts to procure materials for its nuclear
program, some of them located in various parts of Asia, are now on United
Nations, European Union and US blacklists. Last October, the Washington Post
quoted a senior official from a Western intelligence agency as saying that
Chinese firms had been discovered "selling high-quality carbon fiber to Iran
to help it build better centrifuges, which are used in enriching uranium". 

Those doing business with Iranian banks are on notice. The United States in
particular has cracked down hard. Thanks to recent legislation, all
international banks operating in the US must choose between the American
financial market and its Iranian counterpart. Banks that choose to do
business with sanctioned Iranian institutions face serious punishment: the
Justice Department can close any branches they maintain on American soil or
force a sale of all their US assets, among other things. 

The Chinese and South Korean banks named above all have banking
relationships with US financial institutions, and the Korean banks have a
physical presence in the United States. In addition, those selling dual-use
materiel that furthers the Islamic Republic's nuclear agenda are also under
close watch in Washington. 

Going forward, Asian policymakers need to close the loopholes that enable
designated Iranian banks to provide illicit actors with the means to conduct
their activities and maintain their infrastructure. Countries like China,
Malaysia and South Korea should also be more vigilant in cracking down on
companies trafficking in dual-use parts. Sanctions can still work, but the
clock is ticking. 

Avi Jorisch, a former US Treasury official, is president of the Red Cell
Intelligence Group and the author of Iran's Dirty Banking: How the Islamic
Republic Is Skirting International Financial Sanctions. 

(Copyright 2011 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved.
Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)

 

 

 

 



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