IRAN SANCTIONS US COMPANIES AND CONSIDERS A BILL TO DESIGNATE US MILITARY AND CIA AS "TERRORIST GROUPS"
Apparently in response to U.S. sanctions placed on dozens of
Iranian entities earlier this year, following Iran’s unlawful ballistic missile
tests, the Iranian regime imposed sanctions on 15 American companies, last
week. Among other things, it accused them of “support for terrorism”.
The
U.S. companies who were targeted do not do business in Iran.
Additionally,
a senior Iranian lawmaker stated that Iran is now considering a bill calling
the U.S. military and the CIA “terrorist groups” in reaction to the U.S.
Congress’s bill to designate the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) a
foreign terrorist organization (FTO). The White House’s review of that
possibility has rattled Tehran, as it would have far-reaching consequences for
the IRGC, who control a large portion of Iran’s entire economy.
Evidently,these are Tehran’s latest reactions to the new U.S. administration’s tougher
rhetoric. The former American administration followed a policy of appeasement,
giving Tehran many concessions. However, that policy has ended.
According
to an article by
Ali Safavi, member of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Council of
Resistance of Iran, “In 2005, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei executed an elaborate
and comprehensive plan to strengthen the IRGC. In May of that year, Khamenei
issued a directive instructing the government to transfer 80 percent of its
holdings to "non-governmental public, private and cooperative
sectors" — a.k.a. Khamenei and IRGC affiliates — by 2009. A month later,
he engineered the election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.”
He
continues, “Ahmadinejad came out of nowhere to occupy the presidential palace.
A day before the election, official opinion polls had pegged his support at 1.7
percent. The poll favorite, with 28-percent support (a 17-fold superiority over
Ahmadinejad), was the former president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani,” and adds,
“True to form, Ahmadinejad quickly stacked ministries with veterans of the
IRGC. Half of his cabinet members were IRGC members. A year earlier, IRGC
veterans had won the majority of seats in parliament. Shortly after Ahmadinejad's
win, the IRGC announced an internal restructuring push to reflect its expanding
roles and responsibilities on the political playing field.”
The
National Council of Resistance of Iran, published a new book entitled,
"The Rise of Iran's Revolutionary Guards' Financial Empire”. In it, they
divulge how the state-owned assets were transferred to the IRGC, including
large mines, primary industries, foreign commerce, banks, insurance, power
industries, post, roads, railroads, airlines and shipping companies.
It
is estimated that $12 billion worth of assets were transferred to Khamenei and
the IRGC between 2005 through 2008, who now own 14 major powerhouses that run
the economy, according to the NCRI, including a conglomerate known as Setad;
the foundations (or bonyads) like the Mostazafan, Astan-e Qods, and Shahid
foundations; the IRGC Cooperatives; major business empires like the Khatam
Construction Co. and Ghadir Investments; as well as "cooperatives"
controlled by the security forces.
The
NCRI reports that Tehran spends between $15-20 billion annually to fund the war
in Syria, including some $1 billion in salaries. Addiionally, at least $1
billion is provided annually to the Lebanese Hezbollah. Yemen and Iraq are
supported by the IRGC and Khamenei, according to the report.
Western
business ventures and governments should be warned that “doing business with
Iran is doing business with the IRGC.”
According
to Safavi, “The new administration should designate the IRGC as a terrorist
entity. The possibility alone has inspired Iran’s resort to pathetic
countermeasures. However comical, they are harmless. And that’s a step in the
right direction.”
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