Measures to Increase Pressure on Iran
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Secretary of Treasury Tim Geithner
Treaty Room
Washington, DC
November 21, 2011
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well,
good afternoon, everyone. I am delighted to welcome Secretary Geithner
here to the Treaty Room of the State Department, and I also welcome his
team and thank my team for the work that they have been doing with
respect to Iran.
Recent days have brought new evidence that Iran’s leaders continue to
defy their international obligations and violate international norms,
including the recent plot to assassinate the Saudi Ambassador here in
the United States and as verified by the new report from the
International Atomic Energy Agency that further documents Iran’s conduct
of activities directly related to the development of nuclear weapons.
Now, this report from the IAEA is not the United States or our European
partners making accusations; this is the result of an independent review
and it reflects the judgment of the international community.
There have to be consequences for such behavior. So on Friday, Iran
was condemned in votes at the UN in New York and at the IAEA in Vienna.
And earlier today, the UN General Assembly again strongly reprimanded
Iran for continuing human rights abuses, persecution of minorities, and
forcible restrictions on political freedom. The message is clear: If
Iran’s intransigence continues, it will face increasing pressure and
isolation.
Today the United States is taking a series of steps to sharpen this choice.
First, President Obama signed an Executive Order that, for the first
time, specifically targets Iran’s petrochemical industry, a significant
source of export revenues and a cover for imports for sanctioned
activities. This will allow us to sanction the provision of goods,
services, and technology to the petrochemical sector. To accompany this
new measure, we will launch a worldwide diplomatic campaign to encourage
other countries to shift any purchases of Iranian petrochemical
products to other suppliers.
Second, in the same Executive Order, we are expanding sanctions on
Iran’s oil and gas business. U.S. law already sanctions large-scale
investments in up-stream exploration and development of oil and gas, and
now it will also be sanctionable to provide goods, services, and
technology for those activities as well. This will make it more
difficult for Iran to work around the sanctions and will further impede
efforts to maintain and modernize its oil and gas sector.
Third, under an existing Executive Order, we are designating a number of individuals and entities
for their roles in assisting Iran’s prohibited nuclear programs,
including its enrichment and heavy water programs. Their assets subject
to U.S. jurisdiction will be frozen and American individuals and
entities will be prohibited from engaging in any transactions with them.
And finally, as Secretary Geithner will discuss in more detail, the
Treasury Department is formally identifying Iran as a jurisdiction of
primary money laundering concern. This is the strongest official warning
we can give that any transaction with Iran poses serious risks of
deception or diversion.
These steps were accompanied today by complementary measures by the
UK and Canada, and we expect additional sanctions by other international
partners in the days ahead.
Together, these measures represent a significant ratcheting up of
pressure on Iran, its sources of income, and its illegal activities.
They build on an extensive existing sanctions regime put into place by
the UN Security Council and a large number of countries, including our
own, acting nationally and multilaterally to implement the Council’s
measures. And these sanctions are already having a dramatic effect. They
have almost completely isolated Iran from the international financial
sector and have made it very risky and costly a place to do business.
Most of the world’s major energy companies have left, undermining
Iran’s efforts to boost its declining oil production, its main source of
revenues. Iran has found it much more difficult to operate its national
airline and shipping companies, and to procure equipment and technology
for its prohibited weapons programs. And those individuals and
organizations responsible for terrorism and human rights abuses,
including the Revolutionary Guard Corps and its Qods Force, have been
specifically targeted.
The impact will only grow unless Iran’s leaders decide to change
course and meet their international obligations. And let me be clear:
Today’s actions do not exhaust our opportunities to sanction Iran. We
continue actively to consider a range of increasingly aggressive
measures. We have worked closely with Congress and have put to effective
use the legislative tools they have provided. We are committed to
continuing our collaboration to develop additional sanctions that will
have the effect we all want: putting strong pressure on Iran.
Now, the Administration’s dual-track strategy is not only about
pressure. It is also about engaging Iran, engagement that would be aimed
at resolving the international community’s serious and growing concerns
about Iran’s nuclear program. And the United States is committed to
engagement, but only – and I say only – if Iran is prepared to engage
seriously and concretely without preconditions. So far, we have seen
little indication that Iran is serious about negotiations on its nuclear
program. And until we do, and until Iran’s leaders live up to their
international obligations, they will face increasing consequences.
Now I would like to invite Secretary Geithner to explain in more depth how some of these sanctions will be working.
Tim.
SECRETARY GEITHNER: Thank you, Secretary Clinton, and my
compliments also to your colleagues and to ours – to mine, led by David
Cohen and Danny Glaser, for doing such a great job today on these very
significant financial actions.
Since the President came into office, this Administration has
executed a very aggressive strategy to stop Iran’s illicit activities. A
key part of this strategy has been to impose overwhelming financial
pressure on Iran, and because of this strategy, Iran has been subjected
to new and damaging levels of financial and commercial isolation.
First, we have dramatically reduced Iran’s access to the
international financial system. Iranian banks are losing the ability to
do business around the world, which in turn has reduced the ability of
the government to finance activities opposed by the international
community.
Second, Iran’s national shipping line, which has transported material
in support of Iran’s missile program, is now shut off from many of the
world’s major ports and routinely finds its ships seized or turned away.
And third, Iran’s primary source of revenue, its oil sector, is in
decline because it cannot attract the foreign investment that it
desperately needs to maintain levels of production.
Together, the intensification of sanctions by this Administration,
alongside our partners around the world, has inflicted substantial
damage to the Iranian economy. To continue these efforts, the Treasury
Department today is designating additional entities for their support of
Iran’s nuclear and proliferation-related activities.
Today, we are taking the very significant step of acting under
Section 311 of the Patriot Act. For the first time, we are identifying
the entire Iranian banking sector, including the Central Bank of Iran,
as a threat to governments or financial institutions that do business
with Iranian banks. If you are a financial institutions anywhere in the
world and you engage in any transaction involving Iran’s central bank or
any other Iranian bank operating inside or outside Iran, then you are
at risk of supporting Iran’s illicit activities: its support – its
pursuit of nuclear weapons, its support for terrorism, and its efforts
to deceive responsible financial institutions and to evade sanctions.
Any and every financial transaction with Iran poses grave risk of
supporting those activities, so financial institutions around the world
should think hard about the risks of doing business with Iran.
We are taking this action, as the Secretary said, alongside our
partners in the United Kingdom and Canada, who announced earlier today
that they were implementing similar measures to insulate their banks
from Iran. And as a result of this coordinated effort, Iran is now cut
off from three of the world’s largest financial sectors. We encourage
other leaders around the world to take forceful steps like these actions
to prevent Iran from simply shifting financial activity to banks within
their nations.
As we put these new measures in place and as we continue to work to
expand their reach around the world, we will continue to explore other
measures. No option is off the table, including the possibility of
imposing additional sanctions on the Central Bank of Iran. The policies
Iran is pursuing are unacceptable, and until Iran’s leadership agrees to
abandon this dangerous course, we will continue to use tough and
innovative means to impose severe economic and financial consequences on
Iran’s leadership.
Thank you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you all very much.