Page added on August 19, 2012
* Iranian banks, oil-smugglers bringing in needed dollars
* Some officials close to President Maliki profiting
* Obama bars Iraqi bank from U.S. dealings
WASHINGTON, Aug 18 (Reuters) – Iraq has been helping Iran skirt economic sanctions imposed because of its nuclear program, using a network of financial institutions and oil-smuggling operations that are providing Tehran with a crucial flow of dollars, the New York Times said on Saturday.
In some case, Iraqi government officials are turning a blind eye to trade with Iran, while other officials in Baghdad are directly profiting from the activities — with several of them having close ties to Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, the Times said.
U.S. President Barack Obama acknowledged the problem last month when he barred a small Iraqi bank, the Elaf Islamic Bank, from any dealings with the American banking system, the newspaper said.
At the time, the president said that the bank had “facilitated transactions worth millions of dollars on behalf of Iranian banks that are subject to sanctions for their links to Iran’s illicit proliferation activities.”
And yet Iraqi banking experts told the Times that Elaf Islamic Bank was still participating in the Iraq Central Bank’s daily auction at which commercial banks can sell Iraqi dinars and buy dollars. Through these auctions, Iran is able to bolster its reserve of dollars that are used to pay for much-needed imports.
The Times, citing sources in the Obama administration, current and former American and Iraqi officials and banking and oil experts, said Washington has privately complained to Iraqi officials about financial and logistical ties between Baghdad and Tehran.
In one recent instance, when Obama learned that the Iraqi government was aiding the Iranians by allowing them to use Iraqi airspace to ferry supplies to Syria, he called Maliki to complain, and Iranian planes then flew another route, the Times said.
Iranian organizations apparently have gained control over at least four Iraqi commercial banks through Iraqi intermediaries, which would gives Iran direct access to the international financial system, from which they are barred by the economic sanctions, the Times said.
The problem with illegal Iraq-Iran trade has become well-enough known in Baghdad that it has roiled Iraqi politics, the newspaper said.
“We want to question the central bank and the banks that are involved,” Ali al-Sachri, a member of Parliament, told the Times. He said he was concerned that the huge dollar transfers threatened the economic stability of Iraq by depleting the country’s foreign reserves.
Iran’s ability to trade and the incoming flow of dollars is crucial to the country because the economic sanctions imposed by the United Nations and individual countries are squeezing its economy, the paper said.
5 Comments on "Iraqis helping Iran skirt sanctions"
BillT on Sun, 19th Aug 2012 2:34 pm
Hahahaha….sanction? What sanctions? We have friends, the Empire has enemies. Attack us and we will destroy your economy and bring you down. Your power is gone … only desperate threats left in your bag of tricks.
DC on Sun, 19th Aug 2012 9:11 pm
The NYT should explain how normal legitimate selling of oil is ‘smuggling’, and how ‘profiting’ by the completely appropriate trade is somehow improper. The US ‘sanctions’ have exactly zero basis in any international law. Why not just call it what it is.. a co-ercive illegal trade embargo. It is good Iraq is willing to defy the amerikans, despite the destruction and instability the US rained down on them for so long. Wonder if Obomber and his advisors are thinkin Iraq needs to be re-invaded, since clearly they didnt learn there lesson the first time around.
The UN sanctions are a sham, they were railroaded though the UN by the US and AIPAC. Call them what they are, US sanctions with better PR…
Arthur on Sun, 19th Aug 2012 9:20 pm
Shia birds of a feather, flock together…
Yesterday Ahmadinedjad said:
“Westerners are after [the establishment of] a new Middle East. We are also after a new Middle East which will definitely be formed … but in this new Middle East, there will be no trace of the US and Zionists,” Ahmadinejad pointed out.
Translation: there will be a shia superalliance, which already comprises Iran and Iraq, thanks to the clean breaker Clouseaus in Washington, and next the shia territories in SA are going to added to this super alliance.
Sunni = desert
Shia = oil
Arthur on Sun, 19th Aug 2012 9:26 pm
The blue print behind current developments in the ME:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Clean_Break:_A_New_Strategy_for_Securing_the_Realm
Arthur on Sun, 19th Aug 2012 9:52 pm
“The NYT should explain how normal legitimate selling of oil is ‘smuggling’, and how ‘profiting’ by the completely appropriate trade is somehow improper.”
Haha… The Grand Old Man of the 9/11 truth movement prof. David Ray Griffin, demanded something similar, after he wrote, as usual, a lucid analysis of the current state of 9/11 truth research:
http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=32392
“I call on the New York Times to take the lead in finally exposing to the American people and the world the truth about 9/11.”
How can you North-Americans be so terribly naive. The NYT is controlled by the Sulzberger family. They are part of The Stranglehold.