Page added on March 21, 2012
The Obama administration on Tuesday exempted 10 European Union countries and Japan from U.S. economic sanctions because they have significantly reduced their purchases of petroleum from Iran.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton granted waivers to Belgium, Britain, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain and Japan, meaning that banks and other financial institutions based there will not be hit with penalties under U.S. law for a renewable period of 180 days.
President Barack Obama has until March 30 to determine whether oil prices and supplies are sufficient to levy sanctions later this year on countries that still buy oil from Iran. Pending that decision, another 12 nations – including India, China and South Korea – that are deemed to be major importers of Iranian oil have until June 28 to take similar steps or face sanctions. Administration officials believe granting some exemptions before officially authorizing the sanctions could motivate other countries that buy oil from Iran to reduce their purchases.
The sanctions target foreign financial institutions that do business with Iran’s central bank by barring them from opening or maintaining correspondent operations in the United States. It would apply to foreign central banks only for transactions that involve the sale or purchase of petroleum or petroleum products.
The petroleum penalties only apply if the president determines there is a sufficient alternative supply and if the country with jurisdiction over the financial institution has not significantly reduced its purchases of Iranian oil. It also allows the president to waive the penalties based on national security.
In a statement, Clinton lauded the countries granted exemptions, noting that the actions they had taken to reduce their imports from Iran “were not easy.”
“They had to rethink their energy needs at a critical time for the world economy and quickly begin to find alternatives to Iranian oil, which many had been reliant on for their energy needs,” she said. “We commend these countries for their actions and urge other nations that import oil from Iran to follow their example.”
Clinton singled out Japan for praise, noting that it had acted despite severe energy constraints brought about by last year’s earthquake and tsunami. Japan has reduced its imports by between 15 percent and 22 percent by finding other suppliers and focusing on alternative energy sources, according to U.S. officials.
There have been concerns that the squeeze on Iranian customers could send oil prices sharply higher as countries reduced Iranian exports and made up for it by buying from other suppliers. However, oil producers like Saudi Arabia have said they are willing to help offset the difference and U.S. officials have said the restoration of Libya’s crude output to levels produced during the regime of Col. Moammar Gadhafi will also help. Many European countries imported large amounts of oil from Libya, which essentially dried up as a source during the revolt in that country.
Oil prices dropped Tuesday after the exemptions were announced. Traders noted that the exemptions mean some countries that import Iranian oil won’t have to cut off all of it.
Some had feared that if many countries had been required to cut off all their imported Iranian oil, it could have created a run on supplies and caused prices to jump.
“It’ll reduce the squeeze,” said Peter Donovan, an oil broker at Vantage Trading.
Concerns about tightened oil markets have boosted benchmark crude prices 7 percent this year. Brent crude, which prices foreign oil imported by U.S. refineries, is up 16 percent.
A prolonged dispute with Iran could eventually lead to supply shortages in parts of the world, driving both oil and gas prices higher.
The European nations were already subject to European Union rules requiring them to phase out their imports. Those rules were put in place after the passage of the U.S. sanctions legislation that is designed to further isolate Iran and compel it to comply with U.N. demands to come clean about its nuclear program. The U.S. and its allies accuse Iran of using the program to develop atomic weapons while Iran insists it is to produce nuclear energy.
“The United States is leading an unprecedented international coalition of partners that has brought to bear significant pressure on the Iranian regime to change its course,” Clinton said. “Diplomacy coupled with strong pressure can achieve the long-term solutions we seek and we will continue to work with our international partners to increase the pressure on Iran to meet its international obligations.”
Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., who co-authored the sanctions legislation designed to thwart Iran’s suspected nuclear weapons program with Republican Sen. Mark Kirk of Illinois, said in a statement that he supported the secretary’s decision.
“The sanctions are working – many countries and companies have stepped up in recognition of the real threat that Iran poses to its neighbors and the global community and are terminating business relations with Iran,” he said. “For the first time we are seeing a real impact on the Iranian economy.”
“I think our message to Iran is clear and time will tell what they value more, their nuclear program or the political and economic stability of their state,” Menendez said.
8 Comments on "US gives exemption on Iran sanctions to 11 nations"
BillT on Wed, 21st Mar 2012 1:16 am
Backing down already? Obama, don’t you want to be responsible for the next Great Depression, world wide that will crash the Dollar? LOL. Keep listening to that war mongering psychopath, Netanyahu, and you will be led to slaughter in November. Wait and see.
Ham on Wed, 21st Mar 2012 2:11 am
Hahahaha The US will impose economic sanctions on China??? Really? Utter absurdity. Any trade war with China will bankrupt the US tomorrow.
armageddon51 on Wed, 21st Mar 2012 2:13 am
I can believe that the US can dictate what it wants to all nations in the world. What a bunch of f*king pussies. Why is no other countries premiers is telling the US to go to hell. Those sanctions are starving ordinary Iranians and will never achieve the result intended. Americans and Israeli are criminals.
DC on Wed, 21st Mar 2012 2:26 am
The US has no business imposing sanctions on anyone, much less granting ‘exemptions’ to its unlawful corporate rule. It is said people were releived when Rome finally fell. And it will be no different when amerika falls. The releif and joy will be felt around the world. Even its nominal allies can barely tolerate them anymore.
pete on Wed, 21st Mar 2012 3:16 am
China is already in a trade war with the US. rare earth metals, solar panels etc. I also did not see Greece in the list, ouch, kick in the balls when down. I dont know if this was pointed out before but defense sec. Leon Pannetta on Face the Nation jan.2012 said Iran has no nukes or is not trying to build one. according to what Ive read, I did not see the show myself. Maybe Youtube, it would be a good video/article to post on here.
BillT on Wed, 21st Mar 2012 3:31 am
armageddon51, I think they are…at least the ones that don’t bow at the Empire’s feet. For instance…Iran, China, Russia, India (to some extent) and more, Brazil, Venezuela, Syria, Turkey, Pakistan, and Japan.
The problem for the US is not oil or nukes. It is the fact that like Saddam and Gaddafi, Iran is starting to trade in other than Charmin dollars. THAT is what has the elite in a huff. If the dollar loses it’s power, the Us is over. China wants to get out of the dollar too, but is too big to actually attack. After all, do you hit the person with the noose around your neck while you are sitting on a horse and the rope is taunt?
Hubbertsfreak on Wed, 21st Mar 2012 6:21 pm
This makes peak oil abundantly clear. The world needs every drop of oil from every source. I guess Obama bought into the shale story, now he’s backing himself into a corner. Brilliant idea, make enemies of half the planet’s population.
beamofthewave on Thu, 22nd Mar 2012 12:44 am
They only exempted the ones they couldnt make do what they wanted them to do, good way to save face.