US to punish any EU-Iran ‘sanctionable behavior,’ doesn’t see ‘demand’ for touted trade mechanism

Washington is ready to impose sanctions against the European financial settlement (INSTEX) mechanism, which would allow trade to continue between the EU and Iran, US Special Representative to Iran Brian Hook warned on Thursday.
The financial channel, which was announced by Germany, France and the UK in January, is aimed to enable “legitimate trade” with Iran in the wake of US sanctions against the Islamic Republic.

Bloomberg had reported earlier that the US Treasury Department’s undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, Sigal Mandelker, sent a letter on May 7 warning that INSTEX and anyone associated with it could be barred from the US financial system, if it goes into effect.

Sources told the media that European envoys had earlier downplayed the significance of the payment mechanism, in discussions they’d held with the White House. Washington, however, has decided that the three largest EU powers (France, Germany and the UK) were far more serious about it than they had originally said.

The US has been warning businesses, government officials and staff working to set up the mechanism about the consequences they face if they continued to do business in Iran, the sources said.

The EU countries had been considering the idea of a special payment channel with Iran since last year, after the US’ dramatic withdrawal from the landmark nuclear deal, signed by Tehran and six world powers in 2015. Washington then reintroduced its sanctions against Iran, ignoring its partners’ advice.

At the initial stage, INSTEX would have facilitated trade between the companies of the three EU nations and Iran by bypassing the SWIFT international payments system and focussing on high-priority “humanitarian goods,” such as food and medical supplies.

Tehran has recently criticized Europe for “lagging behind” in launching the trade mechanism. The country’s foreign minister, Mohammed Javad Zarif, said that Europeans have “no excuse” for delaying the launch of the mechanism any further and that Iran would not simply “continue to wait for them.”