Iran Sanctions
Kenneth Katzman
Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
March 28, 2012
Congressional Research Service
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www.crs.gov
RS20871
CRS Report for Congress
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Iran Sanctions

Summary
The objective of sanctions—to compel Iran to verifiably demonstrate that its nuclear program is
for purely peaceful uses—has not been achieved to date. However, the international coalition that
is imposing progressively strict economic sanctions on Iran is broadening and deepening, with
increasingly significant effect on Iran’s economy. U.S. officials believe that these sanctions—
which are now targeting Iran’s oil export lifeline - might yet cause Iran to return to the nuclear
bargaining table with greater seriousness and intent toward peaceful resolution. Many judge that
Iran needs an easing of sanctions because the energy sector provides nearly 70% of Iran’s
government revenues. Iran’s worsening economic situation is caused by:
• A decision by the European Union on January 23, 2012, to wind down purchases
of Iranian crude oil by July 1, 2012. EU countries buy about 20% of Iran’s oil
exports. This action took into consideration an International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) report on Iran’s possible efforts to design a nuclear explosive
device, and diplomatic and financial rifts with Britain, which caused the storming
of the British Embassy in Tehran on November 30, 2011.
• Decisions by other Iranian oil purchasers, particularly Japan, to reduce purchases
of Iranian oil. Those decisions are intended to comply with a provision of the
FY2012 National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 112-81, signed December 31,
2011) that prevents the opening of U.S. accounts by foreign banks that conduct
transactions with Iran’s Central Bank—unless the parent country reduces
substantially its purchases of Iranian oil.
• The willingness of other oil producers with spare capacity, particularly Saudi
Arabia, a strategic rival, to sell additional oil to countries cutting Iranian oil buys.
• Industry sources said in late March 2012 that Iran’s oil sales for March have
fallen dramatically from prior levels. Once the EU embargo is fully implemented,
Iran’s oil sales might fall by as much as 40% (1 million barrels per day reduction
out of 2.5 million barrels per day of sales). Iran is widely assessed as unable to
economically sustain that level of lost oil sales.
The signs of economic pressure on Iran are multiplying. The value of Iran’s rial has dropped
precipitously since December 2011. Iranian leaders have admitted that Iran is virtually cut off
from the international banking system and is increasingly trading through barter arrangements
rather than hard currency exchange. The pullout from Iran by major international firms have
slowed Iran’s efforts to modernize its energy sector and other sectors, rendering Iran unable to
increase its oil production above 4.1 million barrels per day. Still, Iran has small amounts of
natural gas exports; it had none at all before Iran opened its fields to foreign investment in 1996.
Still, relatively high world oil prices have reduced some of the effects of the sanctions.
Despite the imposition of what many now consider to be “crippling” sanctions, some in Congress
believe that economic and diplomatic pressure on Iran needs to increase further and faster. In the
112th Congress, legislation, such as S. 1048, H.R. 1905, and S. 2101, would enhance both the
economic sanctions and human rights-related provisions of a major 2010 Iran sanctions law (P.L.
111-195) and other laws. However, some believe that further U.S. sanctions could risk fracturing
the international coalition. For a broader analysis of policy on Iran, see CRS Report RL32048,
Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses, by Kenneth Katzman.
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Contents
Overview.......................................................................................................................................... 1
Sanctions Targeting Foreign Energy Involvement in Iran: The Iran Sanctions Act (ISA),
CISADA, and a November 2011 Executive Order....................................................................... 1
The Iran Sanctions Act and CISADA Amendments .................................................................. 1
Key “Triggers” .................................................................................................................... 2
Mandate and Time Frame to Investigate Violations............................................................ 5
Available Sanctions Under ISA........................................................................................... 5
Waivers, Exemptions, and Termination Authority .............................................................. 6
Termination Requirements and Sunset Provisions.............................................................. 7
Interpretations of ISA and CISADA.......................................................................................... 7
Non-Application to Crude Oil or Natural Gas Purchases from Iran or to Official
Credit Guarantee Agencies............................................................................................... 8
Application to Energy Pipelines.......................................................................................... 9
Application to Iranian Firms or the Revolutionary Guard ................................................ 10
Application to Liquefied Natural Gas ............................................................................... 11
Implementation of ISA and CISADA...................................................................................... 11
ISA Sanctions Determinations: September 2010 to the Present........................................ 12
Ban on U.S. Trade and Investment With Iran ................................................................................ 15
Implementation........................................................................................................................ 17
Non-Application to Foreign Refined Oil With Iranian Content........................................ 17
Non-Application to Foreign Subsidiaries of U.S. Firms ................................................... 17
Financial Sanctions: CISADA and Sanctions on Dealings with Iran’s Central Bank.................... 20
Early Efforts: Targeted Financial Measures ............................................................................ 20
Banking Provisions of CISADA ............................................................................................. 20
Sanctions Imposed?........................................................................................................... 21
Section 311 of the Patriot Act.................................................................................................. 21
Sanctioning Against Dealings With Iran’s Central Bank/Section 1245 of the FY2012
National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 112-81)............................................................... 22
Implementation/Exemptions Issued .................................................................................. 23
February 6, 2012, Executive Order on the Central Bank .................................................. 23
Terrorism List Designation-Related Sanctions .............................................................................. 24
Executive Order 13224: Sanctioning Terrorism Supporting Entities ...................................... 24
Proliferation-Related U.S. Sanctions ............................................................................................. 25
Iran-Iraq Arms Nonproliferation Act....................................................................................... 25
Iran-North Korea-Syria Nonproliferation Act ......................................................................... 26
Executive Order 13382............................................................................................................ 26
Foreign Aid Restrictions for Suppliers of Iran ........................................................................ 26
U.S. Efforts to Promote Divestment .............................................................................................. 26
U.S. Sanctions Intended to Support Democratic Change in Iran or Alter Iran’s Foreign
Policy.......................................................................................................................................... 27
Expanding Internet and Communications Freedoms............................................................... 27
Implementation.................................................................................................................. 28
Measures to Sanction Human Rights Abuses and Promote the Opposition ............................ 28
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Executive Order 13438 and 13572: Sanctioning Iranian Involvement
in the Region .................................................................................................................. 29
Separate Visa Ban.............................................................................................................. 29
Blocked Iranian Property and Assets ............................................................................................. 29
U.N. Sanctions ............................................................................................................................... 30
International Implementation and Compliance.............................................................................. 32
European Union and Other Western States.............................................................................. 32
EU Oil Embargo and Central Bank of Iran Cutoff............................................................ 32
SWIFT Cutoff.................................................................................................................... 33
Japan and South Korea ............................................................................................................ 33
India......................................................................................................................................... 34
China and Russia ..................................................................................................................... 34
China ................................................................................................................................. 35
Turkey...................................................................................................................................... 35
Persian Gulf and Other Middle Eastern States ........................................................................ 35
Latin America .......................................................................................................................... 36
Contrast With Previous Periods............................................................................................... 36
World Bank Loans ................................................................................................................... 37
Effectiveness of Sanctions on Iran................................................................................................. 41
Effect on Nuclear Negotiations ............................................................................................... 42
Counter-Proliferation Effects................................................................................................... 42
General Political Effects.......................................................................................................... 42
Economic Effects..................................................................................................................... 43
Foreign Companies Exiting the Iran Market..................................................................... 45
Foreign Firms Reportedly Remaining in the Iran Market ................................................. 46
Subsidy Phase-Out Issue ................................................................................................... 46
Effect on the Development of the Energy Sector .................................................................... 46
Concerns About “Backfill”................................................................................................ 47
Effect on Gasoline Availability and Importation............................................................... 53
Additional Sanctions: Possible Legislative, Administrative, and Multilateral Action................... 55
Major Bills Pending (H.R. 1905, H.R. 2105, S. 1048, S. 2101).............................................. 55
H.R. 1905 (Iran Threat Reduction Act of 2011)................................................................ 56
H.R. 2105/S. 1048: The Iran, North Korea, and Syria Nonproliferation Reform
and Modernization Act/Iran, North Korea, and Syria Sanctions Consolidation
Act of 2011..................................................................................................................... 57
S. 2101............................................................................................................................... 57
Other Proposals in the 112th Congress..................................................................................... 58
Possible Additional Multilateral Sanctions.............................................................................. 58
Comprehensive Oil Embargo ............................................................................................ 59
Iran “Oil-Free Zone” ......................................................................................................... 59
Other Possibilities ............................................................................................................. 59

Tables
Table 1. Top Energy Buyers From Iran (2011) ................................................................................ 8
Table 2. Summary of Provisions of U.N. Resolutions on Iran Nuclear Program (1737,
1747, 1803, and 1929) ................................................................................................................ 31
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Table 3. Comparison Between U.S., U.N., and EU and Allied Country Sanctions ....................... 37
Table 4. Post-1999 Major Investments/Major Development Projects
in Iran’s Energy Sector ............................................................................................................... 48
Table 5. Provisions and Implementation of CISADA (P.L. 111-195)............................................ 61
Table 6. Entities Sanctioned Under U.N. Resolutions and
U.S. Laws and Executive Orders................................................................................................ 65

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 75

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Overview
The Obama Administration’s policy approach toward Iran has contrasted with the Bush
Administration’s by attempting to couple the imposition of sanctions with stepped-up U.S.
participation in negotiations with Iran on the nuclear issue. However, with negotiations yielding
no compromise, since early 2010 the Administration and Congress have focused on achieving
adoption of and implementing additional U.S., U.N., and allied country sanctions whose
cumulative effect could compel Iran to accept a nuclear bargain.
U.N. and worldwide bilateral sanctions on Iran (the latest of which are imposed by Resolution
1929, adopted June 9, 2010) are a relatively recent (post-2006) development. U.S. sanctions, on
the other hand, have been a major feature of U.S. Iran policy since Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution.
Many of the U.S. sanctions overlap each other as well as the U.N. sanctions now in place, and
national measures undertaken by European and some Asian countries. Some U.S. sanctions,
particularly the 1996 Iran Sanctions Act (ISA), caused differences of opinion between the United
States and its European allies because it mandates U.S. imposition of sanctions on foreign firms.
Successive Administrations have sought to ensure that U.S. sanctions do not hamper cooperation
with key international partners whose support is needed to isolate Iran.
Sanctions Targeting Foreign Energy Involvement in
Iran: The Iran Sanctions Act (ISA), CISADA, and a
November 2011 Executive Order

Since 1996, Congress and successive Administrations have put in place steps to try to force
foreign energy firms to choose between participating in the U.S. market, or continuing to operate
in or conduct various energy-related transactions with Iran.
The Iran Sanctions Act and CISADA Amendments
The Iran Sanctions Act (ISA) is the core of those U.S. sanctions intended to force foreign firms
out of the Iran market. It took advantage of the opportunity for the United States to try to harm
Iran’s energy sector when Iran, in November 1995, opened the sector to foreign investment. To
accommodate its insistence on retaining control of its national resources, Iran used a “buy-back”
investment program in which foreign firms gradually recoup their investments as oil and gas is
discovered and then produced. With input from the Administration, on September 8, 1995,
Senator Alfonse D’Amato introduced the “Iran Foreign Oil Sanctions Act” to sanction foreign
firms’ exports to Iran of energy technology. A revised version instead sanctioning investment in
Iran’s energy sector passed the Senate on December 18, 1995 (voice vote). On December 20,
1995, the Senate passed a version applying the provisions to Libya, which was refusing to yield
for trial the two intelligence agents suspected in the December 21, 1988, bombing of Pan Am
103. The House passed H.R. 3107, on June 19, 1996 (415-0), and then concurred on a Senate
version adopted on July 16, 1996 (unanimous consent). The Iran and Libya Sanctions Act was
signed on August 5, 1996 (P.L. 104-172).

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ISA has attracted substantial attention because it is an “extra-territorial sanction”—it authorizes
U.S. penalties against foreign firms, many of which are incorporated in countries that are U.S.
allies. When it was first enacted in 1996, Congress and the Clinton Administration saw ISA as a
potential mechanism to compel U.S. allies to join the United States in enacting trade sanctions
against Iran. American firms are separately restricted from trading with or investing in Iran under
separate U.S. executive orders, as discussed below. Its application has been further expanded by
the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2012 (CISADA, P.L.
111-195 enacted July 1, 2010) as well as by Executive Order 13590, issued November 21, 2011.
Originally called the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act (ILSA), ISA was enacted to try to deny Iran
the resources to further its nuclear program and to support terrorist organizations such as
Hizbollah, Hamas, and Palestine Islamic Jihad. Iran’s petroleum sector generates about 20% of
Iran’s GDP (which is about $870 billion), 80% of its exports, and 60% to 70% of its government
revenue. Iran’s oil sector is as old as the petroleum industry itself (early 20th century), and Iran’s
onshore oil fields and oil industry infrastructure are far past peak production and in need of
substantial investment. Its large natural gas resources (940 trillion cubic feet, exceeded only by
Russia) were virtually undeveloped when ISA was first enacted. Iran has 136.3 billion barrels of
proven oil reserves, the third-largest after Saudi Arabia and Canada. With the exception of
relatively small swap and barter arrangements with neighboring countries, virtually all of Iran’s
oil exports flow through the Strait of Hormuz, which carries about one-third of all internationally
traded oil exported by Iran and other countries on the Persian Gulf.
Key “Triggers”
ISA consists of a number of “triggers”—transactions with Iran that would be considered
violations of ISA and could cause a firm or entity to be sanctioned under ISA’s provisions. When
triggered, ISA provides a number of different sanctions that the President could impose that
would harm a foreign firm’s business opportunities in the United States. ISA does not, and
probably could not practically, compel any foreign government to act against one of its firms.
Original Triggers
ISA primarily targets foreign firms, because American firms are already prohibited from investing
in Iran under the 1995 trade and investment ban discussed below. The original version of ISA
requires the President to sanction companies (entities, persons) that make an “investment”1 of
more than $20 million2 in one year in Iran’s energy sector.3 The definition of “investment” in ISA
(§14 (9)) includes not only equity and royalty arrangements (including additions to existing

1 As amended by CISADA (P.L. 111-195), these definitions include pipelines to or through Iran, as well as contracts to
lead the construction, upgrading, or expansions of energy projects. CISADA also changes the definition of investment
to eliminate the exemption from sanctions for sales of energy-related equipment to Iran, if such sales are structured as
investments or ongoing profit-earning ventures.
2 Under §4(d) of the original act, for Iran, the threshold dropped to $20 million, from $40 million, one year after
enactment, when U.S. allies did not join a multilateral sanctions regime against Iran. However, P.L. 111-195 explicit
sets the threshold investment level at $20 million. For Libya, the threshold was $40 million, and sanctionable activity
included export to Libya of technology banned by Pan Am 103-related Security Council Resolutions 748 (March 31,
1992) and 883 (November 11, 1993).
3 The definition of energy sector had included oil and natural gas, but now, as a consequence of the enactment of P.L.
111-195, also includes liquefied natural gas (LNG), oil or LNG tankers, and products to make or transport pipelines
that transport oil or LNG.
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investment, as added by P.L. 107-24) but any contract that includes “responsibility for the
development of petroleum resources” of Iran.
CISADA did not alter this trigger but it did amend the definition of investment to include
pipelines to or through Iran and contracts to lead the construction, upgrading, or expansions of
energy projects. CISADA also eliminated the wording in the original version of ISA that
specifically exempts from sanctions sales of energy-related equipment to Iran. However, to be
sanctionable, such sales would need to be structured as investments or ongoing profit-earning
ventures rather than simple sales transactions.
The Iran Freedom Support Act (P.L. 109-293) amended ISA to add a trigger: that sanctions should
be imposed on entities that sell to Iran weapons of mass destruction (WMD) technology or
“destabilizing numbers and types” of advanced conventional weapons.
CISADA: Amended ISA by Adding a Trigger—Sales to Iran of Gasoline and
Related Equipment and Services

ISA, as initially constituted, did not address Iran’s gasoline dependency because sales to Iran of
gasoline were not sanctionable under ISA. Nor did the original version sanction the selling to Iran
of equipment with which it can build or expand its refineries using its own construction
capabilities.4 And, it did not clearly apply to Iranian investments in oil refineries in several other
countries, such as Iranian investment to help build oil refineries in Asia or elsewhere.
Many in Congress argued that ISA should be applied to gasoline sales to Iran because Iran is
dependent on gasoline imports to meet about 40% of its gasoline needs and there were a limited
group of major gasoline suppliers to Iran. Others, however, believed the Iranian government
would have numerous ways to circumvent its effects, including rationing, reducing gasoline
subsidies in an effort to reduce gasoline consumption; or offering premium prices to obscure
gasoline suppliers.
An effort to sanction such sales failed in the 110th Congress: H.R. 2880 would have made sales to
Iran of refined petroleum resources a violation of ISA. In the 111th Congress, a few initiatives to
sanction sales of gasoline to Iran were adopted prior to CISADA. Using U.S. funds to fill the
Strategic Petroleum Reserve with products from firms that sell over $1 million worth of gasoline
to Iran was prevented by the FY2010 Energy and Water Appropriation (P.L. 111-85, signed
October 28, 2009). A provision of the FY2010 consolidated appropriation (P.L. 111-117) denied
Ex-Im Bank credits to any firm that sells gasoline to Iran, provides equipment to Iran that it can
use to expand its oil refinery capabilities, or performs gasoline production projects in Iran. These
initiatives did deter some gasoline sales to Iran, including a decision in December 2008 by
Reliance Industries Ltd. of India to at least temporarily cease new sales of refined gasoline to Iran
(December 31, 2008). That decision came after several Members of Congress urged the Ex-Im
Bank of the United States to suspend assistance to Reliance, on the grounds that it was assisting
Iran’s economy with the gas sales. The Ex-Im Bank, in August 2008, had extended a total of $900
million in financing guarantees to Reliance to help it expand.

4 Taking responsibility for constructing oil refineries or petrochemical plants in Iran did constitute sanctionable projects
under the original version of ISA because ISA’s definition of investment includes “responsibility for the development
of petroleum resources located in Iran.” Table 4 provides some information on openly announced contracts to upgrade
or refurbish Iranian oil refineries.
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Later in the 111th Congress, a House bill (Iran Refined Petroleum Sanctions Act) containing the
provisions above sanctioning gasoline related sales to Iran, H.R. 2194, was passed by the House
on December 15, 2009, by a vote of 412-12, with four others voting “present” and six others not
voting. A bill in the Senate, the “Dodd-Shelby Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and
Divestment Act,” (S. 2799), was reported to the full Senate by the Senate Banking Committee on
November 19, 2009, and passed the Senate, by voice vote, on January 28, 2010. It was adopted
by the Senate under unanimous consent as a substitute amendment to H.R. 2194 on March 11,
2010, setting up conference action on the two versions of H.R. 2194. The Senate bill added to the
House bill provisions affecting U.S.-Iran trade and other issues. As shown in Table 2, the final
version contained many of the extensive provisions of the Senate version, and some of the efforts
to compel sanctions represented in the House version. The President signed the final version on
July 1, 2010 (P.L. 111-195). It should be noted that CISADA had many provisions beyond
amending ISA, and Table 5 contains a summary of all its provisions.
Main CISADA Provision Sanctioning Gasoline and Related Sales to Iran. CISADA’s main
provision was to amend ISA by making sanctionable:
• Sales to Iran of over $1 million worth (or $5 million in a one year period) of
gasoline and related aviation and other fuels. (Fuel oil, a petroleum by-product
which is reportedly being sold to Iran by exporters in the Kurdish region of Iraq,
is not included in the definition of refined petroleum.)
• Sales to Iran of equipment or services (same dollar threshold as above) which
would help Iran make or import gasoline. Such sales would include equipment
and services that Iran can use to construct or maintain its oil refineries.
Triggers Added by Executive Order 13590 (November 21, 2011): Application of
ISA to Sales of Energy Sector (Including Petrochemical) Equipment and Services

In the wake of a November 8, 2011, IAEA report indicating Iran might have worked on nuclear
explosive technology, the Administration issued an Executive Order, under the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), expanding the authorities of the Iran Sanctions Act to
direct the Secretary of State to impose at least one (1) of the available ISA sanctions on foreign
firms that
• Provide to Iran $1 million or more (or $5 million in a one year period) worth of
goods or services that Iran could use to maintain or enhance its oil and gas sector.
This would appear to make sanctionable the activity of global oil services firms
in Iran, or the provision to Iran of gear typically used in the oil industry such as
drills, pumps, vacuums, oil rigs, and the like.
• Provide to Iran $250,000 (or $1 million in a one year period) worth of goods or
services that Iran could use to maintain or expand its production of petrochemical
products.
• Because these provisions were issued by Executive Order, the other legislative
provisions of ISA, such as the time frame to begin and complete investigations of
suspected violations, do not necessarily apply.

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Mandate and Time Frame to Investigate Violations
In the original version of ISA, there was no firm requirement, and no time limit, for the
Administration to investigate potential violations and determine that a firm has violated ISA’s
provisions. Some might argue that the CISADA amendments still do not set a binding
determination deadline, although the parameters are narrowed significantly.
In restricting the Administration’s ability to choose not to act on information about potential
violations, CISADA, Section 102(g)(5), makes mandatory that the Administration begin an
investigation of potential ISA violations when there is “credible information” about a potential
violation. The same section of CISADA makes mandatory the 180-day time limit for a
determination of violation (with the exception that the mandatory investigations and time limit go
into effect one year after enactment (as of July 1, 2011), with respect to gasoline related sales to
Iran). Under Section 102(h)(5), the mandate to investigate gasoline related sales can be delayed
an additional 180 days if an Administration report, submitted to Congress by June 1, 2011, asserts
that its policies have produced a significant result in sales of gasoline to Iran. No such report was
submitted. However, there is still lack of precision over what constitutes “credible information”
that an investment or sanctionable sale has been undertaken.
Earlier, P.L. 109-293, the “Iran Freedom Support Act” (signed September 30, 2006) amended ISA
by calling for, but not requiring, a 180-day time limit for a violation determination (there is no
time limit in the original law).5 Early versions of that legislation (H.R. 282, S. 333) contained ISA
amendment proposals that were viewed by the Bush Administration as too restrictive and
potentially harmful to U.S. relations with its allies. These provisions included setting a mandatory
90-day time limit for the Administration to determine whether an investment is a violation;
cutting U.S. foreign assistance to countries whose companies violate ISA; and applying the U.S.-
Iran trade ban to foreign subsidiaries of U.S. firms.
Available Sanctions Under ISA
Once a firm is determined to be a violator, the original version of ISA required the imposition of
two of a menu of six sanctions on that firm. CISADA added three new possible sanctions and
requires the imposition of at least three out of the nine against violators. Executive Order 13590,
discussed above, provides for exactly the same penalties as those in ISA. The nine available
sanctions against the sanctioned entity that the Secretary of State or the Treasury can select from
(§6) include
1. denial of Export-Import Bank loans, credits, or credit guarantees for U.S. exports
to the sanctioned entity;
2. denial of licenses for the U.S. export of military or militarily useful technology to
the entity;
3. denial of U.S. bank loans exceeding $10 million in one year to the entity;

5 Other ISA amendments under that law included recommending against U.S. nuclear agreements with countries that
supply nuclear technology to Iran and expanding provisions of the USA Patriot Act (P.L. 107-56) to curb money-
laundering for use to further WMD programs.
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4. if the entity is a financial institution, a prohibition on its service as a primary
dealer in U.S. government bonds; and/or a prohibition on its serving as a
repository for U.S. government funds (each counts as one sanction);
5. prohibition on U.S. government procurement from the entity;
6. prohibitions in transactions in foreign exchange by the entity;
7. prohibition on any credit or payments between the entity and any U.S. financial
institution;
8. prohibition of the sanctioned entity from acquiring, holding, using, or trading any
U.S.-based property which the sanctioned entity has a (financial) interest in; and
9. restriction on imports from the sanctioned entity, in accordance with the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 U.S.C. 1701).
Mandatory ISA Sanction Imposed by CISADA: Prohibition on Contracts
With the U.S. Government

CISADA (§102(b)) added a provision to further compel foreign companies to comply. It requires
companies, as a condition of obtaining a U.S. government contract, to certify to the relevant U.S.
government agency, that the firm—and any companies it owns or controls—are not violating
ISA. A contract may be terminated—and further penalties imposed—if it is determined that the
company’s certification of compliance was false. CISADA required a revision of the Federal
Acquisition Regulation (within 90 days of CISADA enactment on July 1, 2010) to reflect this
requirement. This requirement has been imposed in regulations, as per an interim rule issued on
September 29, 2010. (H.R. 6296, introduced September 29, 2010, in the 111th Congress, would
have authorized state and local governments to ban such contracts.)
This sanction does not apply to any firm sanctioned under Executive Order 13590 (see above).
Waivers, Exemptions, and Termination Authority
The President has had the authority under ISA to waive sanctions if he certifies that doing so is
important to the U.S. national interest (§9(c)). CISADA (§102(c)), changed the 9(c) ISA waiver
standard to “necessary” to the national interest. Under the original version of ISA, there was also
waiver authority (§4(c)) if the parent country of the violating firm joined a sanctions regime
against Iran, but this waiver provision was changed by the Iran Freedom Support Act (P.L. 109-
293) to allow for a waiver determination based on U.S. vital national security interests. The
Section 4(c) waiver was altered by CISADA to provide for a six month (extendable) waiver if
doing so is vital to the national interest and if the parent country of the violating entity is “closely
cooperating” with U.S. efforts against Iran’s WMD and advanced conventional weapons program.
The criteria of “closely cooperating” are defined in the conference report, with primary focus on
implementing all U.N. sanctions against Iran. However, it is not clear why an Administration
would use a Section 4 waiver rather than a Section 9 waiver, although it could be argued that
using a Section 4 waiver would support U.S. diplomacy with the parent country of the offending
entity.
ISA (§5(f)) also contains several exceptions such that the President is not required to impose
sanctions that prevent procurement of defense articles and services under existing contracts, in
cases where a firm is the sole source supplier of a particular defense article or service. The
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President also is not required to prevent procurement or importation of essential spare parts or
component parts.
In the 110th Congress, several bills (not adopted) contained provisions that would have further
amended ISA. H.R. 1400, which passed the House on September 25, 2007 (397-16), would have
removed the Administration’s ability to waive ISA sanctions under Section 9(c), national interest
grounds, although without imposing a time limit for a sanctions determination.
“Special Rule” Exempting Firms That End Their Business With Iran
CISADA (§102(g)(5) amended ISA to provide a means—a so-called “special rule”—for firms to
avoid any possibility of U.S. sanctions by pledging to verifiably end their business with Iran and
to forgo any sanctionable business with Iran in the future. Under the special rule, the
Administration is not required to make a determination of sanctionability against a firm that
makes such pledges. The special rule has been invoked on several occasions, as discussed below.
Termination Requirements and Sunset Provisions
In its entirety, ISA application to Iran would terminate if Iran is determined by the Administration
to have ceased its efforts to acquire WMD; is removed from the U.S. list of state sponsors of
terrorism; and no longer “poses a significant threat” to U.S. national security and U.S. allies.6 The
amendments to ISA made by P.L. 111-195 would terminate if the first two criteria are met.
Even without such determinations, ISA was to sunset on August 5, 2001, in a climate of lessening
tensions with Iran (and Libya). During 1999 and 2000, the Clinton Administration had eased the
trade ban on Iran somewhat to try to engage the relatively moderate Iranian President Mohammad
Khatemi. However, some maintained that Iran would view its expiration as a concession, and
renewal legislation was enacted (P.L. 107-24, August 3, 2001). This law required an
Administration report on ISA’s effectiveness within 24 to 30 months of enactment; that report was
submitted to Congress in January 2004 and did not recommend that ISA be repealed. ISA was
scheduled to sunset on December 31, 2011 (as provided by P.L. 109-293). The sunset is now
December 31, 2016, as provided for in CISADA.
Interpretations of ISA and CISADA
ISA, as amended by CISADA, has been subject to differing interpretations based on specific
definitions. Interpretations of its provisions have developed and been clarified through real world
examples and cases presented to successive U.S. administrations.

6 This latter termination requirement added by P.L. 109-293. This law also removed Libya from the act, although
application to Libya effectively terminated when the President determined on April 23, 2004, that Libya had fulfilled
the requirements of all U.N. resolutions on Pan Am 103.
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Non-Application to Crude Oil or Natural Gas Purchases from Iran or to
Official Credit Guarantee Agencies

Simple purchases of oil or natural gas from Iran are generally considered not to constitute
violations of ISA, because ISA sanctions investment in Iran’s energy sector and sales to Iran of
gasoline or gasoline-related services or equipment. Some of the deals listed in the chart later in
this report involve combinations of investment and purchase. However, as discussed later, several
countries are considering banning purchases of crude oil or natural gas as the optimal means of
pressuring Iran’s economy.
ISA does not sanction sales to Iran of equipment that Iran could use to explore or extract its own
oil or gas resources, unless such sales are structured to provide ongoing profits or royalties (and
therefore meet the definition of investments as provided in ISA
).7 For example, selling Iran an oil
or gas drill rig or motors or other gear that Iran will use to drill for oil or gas would not appear to
be sanctionable under ISA, unless the sale is structured to provide the seller ongoing profits or
royalties. However, this exception was voided by Executive Order 13590 (November 21, 2011),
which does provide for sanctions against sales of such equipment and services.
Official credit guarantee agencies are not considered sanctionable entities under ISA. In the 110th
Congress, several bills—including S. 970, S. 3227, S. 3445, H.R. 957 (passed the House on July
31, 2007), and H.R. 7112 (which passed the House on September 26, 2008)—would have
expanded the definition of sanctionable entities to official credit guarantee agencies, such as
France’s COFACE and Germany’s Hermes, and to financial institutions and insurers generally.
Some versions of CISADA would have made these entities sanctionable but these provisions
were not included in the final law, probably out of concern for alienating U.S. allies in Europe.
Table 1. Top Energy Buyers From Iran (2011)
(amounts in barrels per day, bpd)
European Union (particularly
600,000
Italy, Spain, and Greece)
China 550,000
Japan 350,000
India 350,000
South Korea
230,000
Turkey 180,000
South Africa
80,000
Singapore 50,000
Total 2.39
mbd
(nearly all of Iran’s oil
exports)
Source: CRS, March 2012

7 Prior to CISADA, the definition of investment in ISA specifically exempted sales of equipment or services under that
definition. CISADA omitted that exclusion.
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Application to Energy Pipelines
ISA’s definition of sanctionable “investment” has been interpreted by successive administrations
to include construction of energy pipelines to or through Iran, because such pipelines are deemed
to help Iran develop its petroleum (oil and natural gas) sector. This interpretation was reinforced
by amendments to ISA in CISADA, which specifically included in the definition of petroleum
resources “products used to construct or maintain pipelines used to transport oil or liquefied
natural gas.”
The Clinton and Bush Administrations used the threat of ISA sanctions to deter oil routes
involving Iran and thereby successfully promoted an alternate route from Azerbaijan (Baku) to
Turkey (Ceyhan). The route became operational in 2005.
Iran Using Pipelines as Main Gas Export Mechanism
Only a few significant pipelines involving Iran have been constructed in recent years. However,
these pipelines serve as the main vehicle through which Iran exports natural gas. In part because
many of the patents are U.S.-held and therefore cannot be sold to Iran (see below), Iran has not
developed a liquefied natural gas (LNG) export capability.
One pipeline, built in 1997, carries natural gas from Iran to Turkey. Each country constructed the
pipeline on its side of their border. At the time the project was under construction, State
Department testimony stated that Turkey would be importing gas originating in Turkmenistan, not
Iran, under a swap arrangement. That was one reason given for why the State Department did not
determine that the project was sanctionable under ISA. However, many believe the decision not
to sanction the pipeline was because the line was viewed as crucial to the energy security of
Turkey, a key U.S. ally. Even though direct Iranian gas exports to Turkey through the line began
in 2001, no determination of sanctionability has been made.
In May 2009, Iran and Armenia inaugurated a natural gas pipeline between the two, built by
Gazprom of Russia. Armenia is Iran’s other main gas customer, aside from Turkey. No
determination of sanctionability has been announced.
Other Prospective Pipelines From Iran: Pakistan, Persian Gulf, and Europe
A pending pipeline project would carry Iranian gas, by pipeline, to Pakistan. India had been a part
of the $7 billion project, which would take about three years to complete, but India did not sign a
memorandum between Iran and Pakistan finalizing the deal on June 12, 2010. India reportedly
has been concerned about the security of the pipeline, the location at which the gas would be
officially transferred to India, pricing of the gas, tariffs, and the source in Iran of the gas to be
sold. During the Bush Administration, Secretary of State Rice on several occasions “expressed
U.S. concern” about the pipeline deal or called it “unacceptable.” Possibly contributing to India’s
hesitancy to move forward, the late Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, the Administration Special
Representative on Pakistan and Afghanistan, during 2010 trips to Pakistan, raised the possibility
that the project could be sanctioned if it is undertaken, citing enactment of CISADA.
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Nonetheless, energy experts8 say Iran has largely completed the pipeline extension from its
network to the Pakistan border, and Pakistan, whose relations with the United States have been
severely strained since mid-2011, is moving forward with construction on its side of the border.
The two countries want it to become operational by mid-2014. However, some reports in March
2012 say that Chinese banks may have withdrawn commitments to provide about $1 billion in
financing for the Pakistan construction, delaying the project.
If Iran resolves its disputes with the international community, India may envision an alternative to
the pipeline project, as a means of tapping into Iran’s vast gas resources. During high-level
economic talks in early July 2010, Iranian and Indian officials reportedly raised the issue of
constructing an underwater natural gas pipeline, which would avoid going through Pakistani
territory. However, such a route would presumably be much more expensive to construct than
would be an overland route.
Iran and Kuwait have held talks on the construction of a 350-mile pipeline that would bring
Iranian gas to Kuwait. The two sides have apparently reached agreement on volumes (8.5 million
cubic meters of gas would go to Kuwait each day) but not on price.9 There are also discussions
reported between Iran and Iraq on constructing pipelines to facilitate oil and gas swaps between
the two, but no firm movement on these projects is evident.
Iran also is attempting to position itself as a gas exporter to Europe. The Obama Administration,
like its predecessors, takes the view that Iran be excluded from gas pipeline projects to Europe,
even though the projects might make Europe less dependent on Russian gas supplies. As shown in
Table 5, in July 2007, a preliminary agreement was reached to build a second Iran-Turkey
pipeline, through which Iranian gas would flow to Europe. That agreement was not finalized
during Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit to Turkey in August 2008 because of
Turkish commercial concerns, but the deal reportedly remains under discussion. On February 23,
2009, Iranian newspapers said Iran had formed a joint venture with a Turkish firm to export 35
billion cubic meters of gas per year to Europe; 50% of the venture would be owned by the
National Iranian Gas Export Company (NIGEC).
Another project involving Iran is the Nabucco pipeline project, which would transport Iranian gas
to Western Europe. Iran, Turkey, and Austria reportedly have negotiated on that project. In order
to avoid potential complications of sanctions on Iran, the major partners in a Trans-Adriatic
Pipeline (TAP) have announced that Iranian gas would not be involved. Iran’s Energy Minister
Gholam-Hossein Nozari said on April 2, 2009, that Iran is considering negotiating a gas export
route—the “Persian Pipeline”—that would send gas to Europe via Iraq, Syria, and the
Mediterranean Sea.
Application to Iranian Firms or the Revolutionary Guard
Although ISA is widely understood to apply to firms around the world that reach an investment
agreement with Iran, the provisions could also be applied to Iranian firms and entities subordinate
to the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC), which is supervised by the Oil Ministry. The firm
that was sanctioned, Naftiran Intertrade Company (NICO), is one such entity; it is a subsidiary of

8 For example, Bijan Kajehpour of Atieh Consulting. Presentation at CSIS, October 4, 2011.
9 http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=NDQ0OTY1NTU4; http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?
nn=8901181055.
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NIOC. However, such entities, including Naftiran, do not do business in the United States and
would not likely be harmed by any of the penalties that could be imposed under ISA. Some of the
other major components of NIOC are
• The Iranian Offshore Oil Company;
• The National Iranian Gas Export Co.;
• National Iranian Tanker Company; and
• Petroleum Engineering and Development Co.
Actual construction and work is largely done through a series of contractors. Some of them, such
as Khatam ol-Anbia and Oriental Kish, have been identified by the U.S. government as controlled
by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and have been sanctioned under various
executive orders, discussed below. The relationship of other Iranian contractors to the Guard, if
any, is unclear. Some of the Iranian contractor firms include Pasargad Oil Co, Zagros Petrochem.
Co, Sazeh Consultants, Qeshm Energy, Sadid Industrial Group, and others. Some believe the
August 2011 confirmation of Khatam ol-Anbia’s chief, Rostam Ghasemi, as Oil Minister, will,
over time, bolster the role of the IRGC in Iran’s oil sector. Ghasemi has also taken over the chair
of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) because it is Iran’s turn to hold
that rotating post. Ghasemi has been subjected to asset freezes by the United States and an asset
freeze and travel ban by the European Union. However, under an agreement between OPEC and
Austria, Ghasemi would be allowed to travel to Vienna (OPEC’s headquarters) to attend OPEC
meetings and perform his duties as rotating head of the organization.
Application to Liquefied Natural Gas
The original version of ISA did not apply to the development of liquefied natural gas. Iran has no
LNG export terminals, in part because the technology for such terminals is patented by U.S. firms
and unavailable for sale to Iran. However, as noted below, CISADA specifically includes LNG in
the definition of petroleum resources and therefore makes investment in LNG (or supply of LNG
tankers or pipelines) sanctionable.
Implementation of ISA and CISADA
The Obama Administration has, as of 2010, stepped up U.S. efforts to use ISA authorities to
discourage investment in Iran and to impose sanctions on companies that insist on continuing
their business with Iran. This is a contrast from the first 14 years after ISA’s passage, in which
successive Administrations hesitated to confront partner countries over its implementation.
The European Union opposed ISA, when it was first enacted, as an extraterritorial application of
U.S. law. It threatened to file a formal complaint before the World Trade Organization (WTO). In
April 1997, the United States and the EU agreed to avoid a trade confrontation over ISA and a
separate Cuba sanctions law (P.L. 104-114). The agreement involved the promise by the EU not
to file any complaint with the WTO over this issue, in exchange for the eventual May 18, 1998,
announcement by the Clinton Administration to waive ISA sanctions (“national interest”—§9c—
waiver) on the first project determined to be in violation. That project was a $2 billion10 contract,

10 Dollar figures for investments in Iran represent public estimates of the amounts investing firms are expected to spend
(continued...)
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signed in September 1997, for Total SA of France and its partners, Gazprom of Russia and
Petronas of Malaysia, to develop phases 2 and 3 of the 25+ phase South Pars gas field. The EU,
for its part, pledged to increase cooperation with the United States on nonproliferation and
counterterrorism. Then-Secretary of State Albright, in the May 18, 1998, waiver announcement,
indicated that similar future such projects by EU firms in Iran would not be sanctioned, provided
overall EU cooperation against Iranian terrorism and proliferation continued.11 (The EU sanctions
against Iran, announced July 27, 2010, might render this understanding moot because the EU
sanctions ban EU investment in and supplies of equipment and services to Iran’s energy sector.)
Despite investments made in Iran’s energy sector, as shown in Table 5, the Administration made
no violations determinations from 1998 until September 2010.
ISA Sanctions Determinations: September 2010 to the Present12
Prior to the passage of CISADA, several Members of Congress questioned why no penalties had
been imposed for violations of ISA. State Department reports to Congress on ISA, required every
six months, have routinely stated that U.S. diplomats raise U.S. policy concerns about Iran with
investing companies and their parent countries. However, these reports have not specifically
stated which foreign companies, if any, were being investigated for ISA violations. No
publication of such deals has been placed in the Federal Register, as required by Section 5e of
ISA. In an effort to address the congressional criticism, Under Secretary of State for Political
Affairs William Burns testified on July 9, 2008 (House Foreign Affairs Committee), that the
Statoil project (listed in Table 6) was under review for ISA sanctions. Statoil is incorporated in
Norway, which is not an EU member, and it would therefore not fall under the 1998 U.S.-EU
agreement discussed above.
Possibly in response to the pending CISADA legislation, and to an October 2009 letter signed by
50 Members of Congress referencing Table 5, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern
Affairs Jeffrey Feltman testified before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on October 28,
2009, that the Obama Administration would review investments in Iran for violations of ISA.
Feltman testified that the preliminary review would be completed within 45 days (by December
11, 2009) to determine which projects, if any, require further investigation. He testified that some
announced projects were for political purposes and did not result in actual investment.
On February 25, 2010, Secretary of State Clinton testified before the House Foreign Affairs
Committee that the State Department’s preliminary review was completed in early February and
that some of the cases reviewed “deserve[] more consideration” and were undergoing additional
scrutiny. The preliminary review, according to the testimony, was conducted, in part, through
State Department officials’ contacts with their counterpart officials abroad and corporation
officials. The additional investigations of problematic investments would involve the intelligence
community, according to Secretary Clinton. State Department officials told CRS in November
2009 that they intended to complete the additional investigation and determine violations within
180 days of the completion of the preliminary review, or by early August 2010. (The 180-day

(...continued)
over the life of a project, which might in some cases be several decades.
11 Text of announcement of waiver decision by then Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, containing expectation of
similar waivers in the future. http://www.parstimes.com/law/albright_southpars.html.
12 Much of this section is derived from a meeting between the CRS author and officials of the State Department’s
Economics Bureau, which is tasked with the referenced review of investment projects. November 24, 2009.
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time frame was, according to the Department officials, consistent with the Iran Freedom Support
Act amendments to ISA discussed above, even though the 180-day time frame was not a
mandatory deadline before CISADA was adopted.) On June 22, 2010, then Assistant Secretary of
State William Burns testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that there were “less
than 10” cases of possible ISA violations.
In public statements and letters to the Administration, some Members of Congress have expressed
concern that Chinese firms have not been sanctioned, indicating that the Administration might be
emphasizing some policy goals with respect to China at the expense of implementing sanctions
against Iran.
September 30, 2010, Sanctions Determinations
Several determinations of sanctionability were made on September 30, 2010:
• Swiss-based Iranian-owned oil trading company—Naftiran Intertrade Company
(NICO)—became the first firm to be sanctioned under ISA. The three penalties
selected were: a ban on Ex-Im Bank credits; a denial of dual use export licensing
to the firm; and a denial of bank loans exceeding $10 million. The mandatory ban
on receiving U.S. government contracts applies as well.
That same day, following a months-long Administration review discussed later, four major energy
sector investing companies were deemed eligible to avoid sanctions, under the ISA “special rule,”
by pledging to end their business in Iran. They are
Total of France,
Statoil of Norway,
ENI of Italy, and
Royal Dutch Shell of Britain and the Netherlands.
There remained some difference of opinion on the Administration invocation of the special rule,
as evident at a hearing of the House Foreign Affairs Committee on December 1, 2010. At the
hearing, then Under Secretary Burns stated that companies exempted under the special rule had
pledged to end their existing investments in Iran “in the very near future.” Some Members of
Congress questioned the imprecision of that time frame and others question the process for
determining whether a firm is adhering to its pledge to pursue no future business in Iran’s energy
sector. The energy firms insisted they needed time to wind down their investments in Iran—under
the buy-back program used for investments in Iran, the energy firms are paid back their
investment over time, making it highly costly for them to suddenly end operations in Iran.
November 17, 2010 Special Rule Application
Inpex of Japan was exempted from sanctions under the special rule on November
17, 2010, according to a State Department announcement. The firm announced
on October 15, 2010, that it is shedding its stake in the Azadegan development
project shown in the table.
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March 29, 2011, Sanctions Determination Against Belarusneft
As shown in table Table 5, several additional foreign investment agreements have been agreed
with Iran not covered in the September 2010 determination. Some of these firms remained under
Administration scrutiny, and the Administration stated that determinations will be made within
180 days (by April 1, 2011).
• On March 29, 2011, with that deadline approaching, the State Department
announced that one additional firm would be sanctioned under ISA—Belarusneft,
a subsidiary of the Belarus government owned Belneftekhim—for a $500 million
contract with Naftiran (the company sanctioned in September 2010) to develop
the Jofeir oil field discussed in Table 5. The three sanctions imposed were: denial
of Ex-Im Bank financing, denial of U.S. export licenses, and denial of U.S. loans
above $10 million. Other subsidiaries of Belneftekhim were sanctioned in 2007
under Executive Order 13405 related to U.S. policy on Belarus.
The Administration announcement did not indicate that some of the other investments in Table 5
or other investments, for which no ISA determinations have been made to date, are still under
investigation.
May 24, 2011, Sanctions Imposed on Gasoline-Related Shippers
On May 24, 2011, the Administration issued its first sanctions determinations under the CISADA-
amended “trigger” that requires sanctions against sales of gasoline and related equipment and
services. The reasons for the sanctions, including size of gasoline shipments to Iran, as well as the
ISA-related sanctions selected, can be found at http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2011/05/
164132.htm. The seven firms sanctioned were
Petrochemical Commercial Company International (PCCI) of Bailiwick of
Jersey and Iran
Royal Oyster Group (UAE)
Tanker Pacific (Singapore)
Allvale Maritime (subsidiary of Ofer Brothers Group, Israel)
Societie Anonyme Monegasque Et Aerienne (SAMAMA, Monaco)
Speedy Ship (UAE/Iran)
Associated Shipbroking (Monaco)
Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) of Venezuela
The determinations of sanctionability of Allvale and SAMAMA were issued on September 13,
2011, as a “clarification” of the May 24 determinations, which named Ofer Brothers Group (and
not Allvale or SAMAMA) as sanctioned entities at that time. Those two entities, as well as
Tanker Pacific are, according to an author conversation with an attorney for the Ofer Brothers
Group, affiliated with a Europe-based trust linked to deceased Ofer brother Sami Ofer, and not
Ofer Brothers Group based in Israel. Ofer Brothers Group, based in Israel, is not therefore under
sanction. The firms named were subjected primarily to the financial-related sanctions provided in
ISA. With respect to PDVSA, the Administration made clear in its announcement that U.S.-based
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subsidiaries were not included in the determination and that U.S. purchases of Venezuelan oil
would not be affected.
The day prior to the May 2011 sanctions announcement, President Obama issued an executive
order clarifying that it is the responsibility of the Treasury Department to implement those ISA
sanctions that involve the financial sector, including bans on loans, credits, and foreign exchange
for, or imports from the sanctioned entity, as well as blockage of property of the sanctioned entity
(if these sanctions are selected by the Secretary of State, who makes the decision which penalties
to impose on sanctioned entities).
January 12, 2012, Determinations on Gasoline Sellers
On January 12, 2012, the Administration determined that three firms had sold more than the
threshold amounts of gasoline to Iran and imposed sanctions (ban on U.S. export licenses for
sales to the firms; a ban on Export Import Bank financing for them; and denial of loans of over
$10 million to them). The three firms are
• Zhuhai Zhenrong Company (China), for allegedly brokering sales of $500
million worth of gasoline to Iran between July 2010 and January 2011.
• Kuo Oil Pte. Ltd. (Singapore), an energy trading firm that allegedly sold $25
million worth of gasoline to Iran between late 2010 and early 2011.
• FAL Oil Company Ltd. (UAE), an independent energy trader that sold Iran over
$70 million worth of gasoline in late 2010.
Ban on U.S. Trade and Investment With Iran
A ban on U.S. trade with and investment in Iran was imposed on May 6, 1995, by President
Clinton, through Executive Order 12959.13 This followed an earlier March 1995 executive order
barring U.S. investment in Iran’s energy sector. The trade and investment ban was intended to
blunt criticism that U.S. trade with Iran made U.S. appeals for multilateral containment of Iran
less credible. Each March since 1995, the U.S. Administration has renewed a declaration of a
state of emergency that triggered the investment ban. The operation of the trade regulations is
stipulated in Section 560 of the Code of Federal Regulations (Iranian Transactions Regulations,
ITR’s).
Some relaxations to the trade ban during 1999-2010 account for the fact that there is some trade
between the United States and Iran, although it is minimal—approximately $300 million per year.
CISADA, signed in July 2012, restored the strict ban on imports from Iran as of September 29,
2010; the ban on exports to Iran was altered only slightly by CISADA. The restoration of a full
import ban largely accounts for the fact that there are only about $1 million per month in imports
from Iran, accounted for by licensing of imports such as artwork for exhibits and the like.

13 The executive order was issued under the authority of: The International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA,
50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.; the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.; §505 of the International Security and
Development Cooperation Act of 1985 (22 U.S.C. 2349aa-9) and §301 of Title 3, United States Code. An August 1997
amendment to the trade ban (Executive Order 13059) prevented U.S. companies from knowingly exporting goods to a
third country for incorporation into products destined for Iran.
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The following conditions and modifications, as administered by the Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC) of the Treasury Department, apply to the operation of the trade ban (“Iran
Transaction Regulations,” ITRs):
• Some goods related to the safe operation of civilian aircraft may be licensed for
export to Iran (§560.528 of Title 31, C.F.R.). As recently as September 2006, the
George W. Bush Administration, in the interests of safe operations of civilian
aircraft, permitted a sale by General Electric of Airbus engine spare parts to be
installed on several Iran Air passenger aircraft (by European airline contractors).
(A provision of H.R. 6296, a bill introduced in the 111th Congress, sought to
prevent these sales to Iran.) An Administration intent to sell Iran data to repair
certain GE engines for its legacy American-made aircraft, in order to ensure safe
operation, was notified to Congress on March 16, 2011. On June 23, 2011, the
Administration sanctioned Iran Air as a proliferation entity under Executive order
13382, rendering any future licensing of parts or repairs for Iran Air unclear.
• U.S. firms may not negotiate with Iran or to trade Iranian oil overseas, but U.S.
companies may apply for licenses to conduct “swaps” of Caspian Sea oil with
Iran. A Mobil Corporation application to do so was denied in April 1999, and no
known applications were submitted subsequent to that first attempt.
• The ban does not apply to personal communications (phone calls, e-mails), or to
humanitarian donations.
• U.S. non-governmental organizations (NGOs) require a specific license to
operate in Iran, but some of these NGOs say the licensing requirements are too
onerous to make work in Iran practical. For example, there are restrictions on
how a U.S. NGO may expend funds in Iran, for example to hire Iranian nationals.
• As noted above, since April 1999, commercial sales of food and medical products
to Iran have been allowed, on a case-by-case basis and subject to OFAC
licensing. According to OFAC in April 2007, licenses for exports of medicines to
treat HIV and leukemia are routinely expedited for sale to Iran, and license
applications are viewed favorably for business school exchanges, earthquake
safety seminars, plant and animal conservation, and medical training in Iran.
• As far as financing of approved U.S. sales to Iran, private letters of credit can be
used to finance approved transactions, but no U.S. government credit guarantees
are available, and U.S. exporters are not permitted to deal directly with Iranian
banks. The FY2001 agriculture appropriations law (P.L. 106-387) contained a
provision banning the use of official credit guarantees for food and medical sales
to Iran and other countries on the U.S. terrorism list, except Cuba, although
allowing for a presidential waiver to permit such credit guarantees. No U.S.
Administration has authorized credit guarantees, to date. In December 2004, the
trade ban was further modified to allow Americans to freely engage in ordinary
publishing activities with entities in Iran (and Cuba and Sudan).
• In April 2000, the trade ban was further eased to allow U.S. importation of
Iranian nuts, dried fruits, carpets, and caviar. Financing was permitted for U.S.
importers of these goods. The United States was the largest market for Iranian
carpets before the 1979 revolution, but U.S. anti-dumping tariffs imposed on
Iranian products in 1986 dampened of many Iranian products. As discussed
above, CISADA ended approval of such imports as of October 1, 2010. Prior to
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the entry into force of this CISADA provision, the number one U.S. import from
Iran was pomegranate juice concentrate. Iranian carpets were another popular
import, despite a U.S. tariff of about 3%-6%. Imports of Iranian caviar carried a
duty of about 15%.
Implementation
OFAC generally declines to discuss export licenses approved, and a press account on December
24, 2010,14 paints a picture of broad export approvals to Iran of such condiments as ice cream
sprinkles, chewing gum, food additives, hot sauces, body-building supplements, and other goods
that appear to have uses other than those that are purely humanitarian or nutritive. U.S. exporters
widely mentioned include Mars Co. (candy manufacturer); Kraft Foods; Wrigley’s (gum); and
McCormick and Co. (spices). Some goods were sold through a Revolutionary Guard-owned chain
of stores in Iran called Qods; as well as a government owned Shahrvand store and a chain called
Refah. OFAC officials indicated in the press accounts that such licenses were not in contradiction
with U.S. law or policy, although there might have been less than full scrutiny of some Iranian
end users and that such scrutiny might be increased in future licensing decisions.
Non-Application to Foreign Refined Oil With Iranian Content
The ban on trade with Iran operates largely on items produced in and originating from Iran itself.
In the case of crude oil, the United States, as noted, cannot import or trade overseas any Iranian
crude oil.
Existing regulations do not ban the importation, from foreign refiners, of gasoline or other energy
products in which Iranian oil is contained and mixed with oil from other producers. The rationale
for the regulation is that the product of a specific refinery is considered a product of the country
where that refinery is located, and not a product of Iran, even if the product has some Iran-origin
content. Some experts say that it is feasible to exclude Iranian content from any refinery, if there
were a decision to ban U.S. imports of products with any Iranian content at all.
Much of the Iranian oil that is mixed and imported into the United States is imported from EU
countries, such as the Netherlands, which has major refineries in Rotterdam, in particular.
However, the EU ban on purchases of Iranian oil imposed on January 23, 2012, may moot this
issue, since only a few other refineries both receive Iranian oil and export gasoline to the United
States—and U.S. gasoline imports from those refineries is minor.
Non-Application to Foreign Subsidiaries of U.S. Firms
The U.S. trade ban does not bar subsidiaries of U.S. firms from dealing with Iran, as long as the
subsidiary has no operational relationship to the parent company. For legal and policy purposes,
foreign subsidiaries are considered foreign persons, not U.S. persons, and are subject to the laws
of the country in which the subsidiaries are incorporated. The March 7, 2010, New York Times
article, cited above, discusses some subsidiaries of U.S. firms that have been active in Iran and

14 The information in this bullet is taken from: Becker, Jo. “With U.S. Leave, Companies Skirt Iran Sanctions.” New
York Times
, December 24, 2010.
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which have also received U.S. government contracts, grants, loans, or loan guarantees. Among
major foreign subsidiaries of U.S. firms that have traded with Iran are the following:
• An Irish subsidiary of the Coca Cola Company provides syrup for the U.S.-brand
soft drink to an Iranian distributor, Khoshgovar. Local versions of both Coke and
of Pepsi (with Iranian-made syrups) are also marketed in Iran by distributors who
licensed the recipes for those soft drinks before the Islamic revolution and before
the trade ban was imposed on Iran.
• Transammonia Corp., via a Swiss-based subsidiary, is said to be conducting
business with Iran to help it export ammonia, a growth export for Iran.
• Press reports in early October 2011 indicated that subsidiaries of Kansas-based
Koch Industries may have sold equipment to Iran to be used in petrochemical
plants (making methanol) and possibly oil refineries, among other equipment.
However, the reports say the sales ended as of 2007, a time at which foreign firm
sales of refinery equipment to Iran were not clearly sanctionable under ISA.15
Energy Related Subsidiaries. Some U.S. energy equipment and energy-related shipping firms
have been and may still be in the Iranian market, according to their recent “10-K” filings with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. These include Natco Group,16 Overseas Shipholding
Group,17 UOP (United Oil Products, a Honeywell subsidiary based in Britain),18 Itron,19 Fluor,20
Parker Drilling, Vantage Energy Services,21 PMFG, Ceradyne, Colfax, Fuel Systems Solutions,
General Maritime Company, Ameron International Corporation, and World Fuel Services Corp.
UOP reportedly sells refinery gear to Iran. However, such sales to Iran, depending on the dollar
value, is now likely sanctionable under ISA, as amended by CISADA, and Executive Order
13590. It is therefore likely that many of these companies will be exiting the Iranian market soon,
if they have not already.
Subsidiaries Exiting Iran
As international sanctions against Iran have increased in recent years, many foreign subsidiaries
have decided that the risks of continuing to do business with Iran outweigh the benefits. These
decisions to leave the Iran market might have been reached in discussions with their U.S. parent
corporations.
• Chemical manufacturer Huntsman announced in January 2010 its subsidiaries
would halt sales to Iran.

15 Asjylyn Loder and David Evans. “Koch Brothers Flout Law Getting Richer With Iran Sales.” Bloomberg News,
October 3, 2011.
16 Form 10-K Filed for fiscal year ended December 31, 2008.
17 Prada, Paulo, and Betsy McKay. Trading Outcry Intensifies. Wall Street Journal, March 27, 2007; Brush, Michael.
Are You Investing in Terrorism? MSN Money, July 9, 2007.
18 New York Times, March 7, 2010, cited previously.
19 Subsidiaries of the Registrant at December 31, 2009. http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/780571/
000078057110000007/ex_21-1.htm.
20 “Exhibit to 10-K Filed February 25, 2009.” Officials of Fluor claim that their only dealings with Iran involve
property in Iran owned by a Fluor subsidiary, which the subsidiary has been unable to dispose of. CRS conversation
with Fluor, December 2009.
21 Form 10-K for Fiscal year ended December 31, 2007.
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• Halliburton. On January 11, 2005, Iran said it had contracted with U.S. company
Halliburton, and an Iranian company, Oriental Kish, to drill for gas in Phases 9
and 10 of South Pars. Halliburton reportedly provided $30 million to $35 million
worth of services per year through Oriental Kish, leaving unclear whether
Halliburton would be considered in violation of the U.S. trade and investment
ban or the Iran Sanctions Act (ISA),22 because the deals involved a subsidiary of
Halliburton (Cayman Islands-registered Halliburton Products and Service, Ltd.,
based in Dubai). On April 10, 2007, Halliburton announced that its subsidiaries
were no longer operating in Iran, as promised in January 2005.
• General Electric (GE). The firm announced in February 2005 that it would seek
no new business in Iran, and it reportedly wound down preexisting contracts by
July 2008. GE was selling Iran equipment and services for hydroelectric, oil and
gas services, and medical diagnostic projects through Italian, Canadian, and
French subsidiaries.
• Oilfield services firm Smith International said on March 1, 2010, it would stop
sales to Iran by its subsidiaries. Another oil services firm, Flowserve, says its
subsidiaries have voluntarily ceased new business with Iran as of 2006.23 FMC
Technologies took similar action in 2009, as did Weatherford24 in 2008.
• On March 1, 2010, Caterpillar Corp. said it had altered its policies to prevent
foreign subsidiaries from selling equipment to independent dealers that have been
reselling the equipment to Iran.25 Ingersoll Rand, maker of air compressors and
cooling systems, followed suit.26
• In April 2010, it was reported that foreign partners of several U.S. or other
multinational accounting firms had cut their ties with Iran, including KPMG of
the Netherlands, and local affiliates of U.S. firms PricewaterhouseCoopers and
Ernst and Young.27
In the 110th Congress, S. 970, S. 3227, S. 3445, and three House-passed bills (H.R. 1400, H.R.
7112, and H.R. 957)—would have applied sanctions to the parent companies of U.S. subsidiaries
if those subsidiaries are directed by the parent company to trade with Iran. A provision of H.R.
6296, another bill introduced in the 111th Congress, would apply this sanction. The Senate version
of CISADA contained a similar provision, but it was taken out in conference action. Provisions in
the 112th Congress are discussed in the section below on pending legislation.

22 “Iran Says Halliburton Won Drilling Contract.” Washington Times, January 11, 2005.
23 In September 2011, the Commerce Department fined Flowserve $2.5 million to settle 288 charges of unlicensed
exports and re-exports of oil industry equipment to Iran, Syria, and other countries.
24 Form 10-K for Fiscal year ended December 31, 2008, claims firm directed its subsidiaries to cease new business in
Iran and Cuba, Syria, and Sudan as of September 2007.
25 “Caterpillar Says Tightens ‘No-Iran’ Business Policy.” Reuters, March 1, 2010.
26 Nixon, Ron. “2 Corporations Say Business With Tehran Will Be Curbed.” New York Times, March 11, 2010.
27 Baker, Peter. “U.S. and Foreign Companies Feeling Pressure to Sever Ties With Iran.” New York Times, April 24,
2010.
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Financial Sanctions: CISADA and Sanctions on
Dealings with Iran’s Central Bank

U.S. efforts to shut Iran out of the international banking system have gained strength as other
countries have joined the effort. These efforts have been implemented by the Treasury
Department through progressively strong actions discussed below, culminating with legislation in
late 2011 to cut off even Iran’s Central Bank from the international financial system.
Early Efforts: Targeted Financial Measures
During 2006-2010, strengthened by leverage provided in five U.N. Security Council Resolutions,
then Undersecretary of the Treasury Stuart Levey and his aides presented information on Iran’s
efforts to use foreign banks to fund WMD programs and funnel money to terrorist groups. In so
doing, Levey’s office convinced at least 80 foreign banks to cease handling financial transactions
with Iranian banks. Levey left office in April 2011 and was replaced by Daniel Cohen.
These actions built on efforts to prevent Iran from accessing the U.S. financial system. On
September 6, 2006, the Treasury Department barred U.S. banks from handling any indirect
transactions (“U-turn transactions,” meaning transactions with non-Iranian foreign banks that are
handling transactions on behalf of an Iranian bank) with Iran’s Bank Saderat, which the
Administration accused of providing funds to Hezbollah.28 The Treasury Department extended
that U-Turn restriction to all Iranian banks on November 6, 2008.
The Treasury Department also used punishments to pressure firms to cease doing business with
Iran. In 2004, the Treasury Department fined UBS $100 million for the unauthorized movement
of U.S. dollars to Iran and other sanctioned countries, and in December 2005, the Treasury
Department fined Dutch bank ABN Amro $80 million for failing to fully report the processing of
financial transactions involving Iran’s Bank Melli (and another bank partially owned by Libya).
In the biggest such instance, on December 16, 2009, the Treasury Department announced that
Credit Suisse would pay a $536 million settlement to the United States for illicitly processing
Iranian transactions with U.S. banks.
On December 17, 2008, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York filed a civil
action seeking to seize the assets of the Assa Company, a UK-chartered entity. Assa allegedly was
maintaining the interests of Bank Melli in an office building in New York City. An Iranian
foundation, the Alavi Foundation, allegedly is an investor in the building.
Banking Provisions of CISADA
The Treasury Department efforts have been enhanced substantially by the authorities of Section
104 of CISADA and U.N. and EU sanctions. Broadly, Section 104 of CISADA seeks to exclude
foreign banks from operating in the United States if these banks conduct transactions with the
Revolutionary Guard or its affiliates, or with Iranian entities that are subject to international or
U.S. sanctions (under various Executive Orders issued under IEEPA, such as 13224 and 13382

28 Kessler, Glenn. “U.S. Moves to Isolate Iranian Banks.” Washington Post, September 9, 2006.
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discussed below). The premise of the provision is that cutting off Iran’s access to the international
financial system would make it more difficult for Iran to move its money.
The binding provisions of Section 104 of CISADA require the Secretary of the Treasury to
prescribe several sets of regulations to forbid U.S. banks from opening new “correspondent
accounts” or “payable through accounts”—or force the cancellation of existing such accounts—
with foreign banks that process “significant transactions” with the entities discussed above.
Foreign banks that do not have operations in the United States typically establish such accounts
with U.S. banks as a means of accessing the U.S. financial system and financial industry. The
entities with which transactions would trigger the sanctions are
• The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) or any of its agents or affiliates
that are sanctioned under U.S. executive orders. The two executive orders that
have served as the principal source of U.S. sanctions against Iranian firms and
organizations are Executive Order 13224 (September 23, 2001) and 13382 (June
28, 2005), discussed elsewhere in this paper.
• Any entity that is sanctioned by U.S. executive orders such as the two mentioned
above. To date, over 125 entities (including individuals), almost all of them Iran-
based or of Iranian origin, have been designated for Iran-related proliferation or
terrorism activities under these orders. A full list is at the end of this paper.
• Any entity designated under the various U.N. Security Council resolutions
adopted to impose sanctions on Iran.
• Any entity that assists Iran’s Central Bank in efforts to help the IRGC acquire
weapons of mass destruction or support international terrorism.
Sanctions Imposed?
The United States has not announced any sanctions against any bank under this provision of
CISADA.
Section 311 of the Patriot Act
On November 21, 2011, the Administration took further steps to isolate Iran’s banking system and
to dissuade foreign banks and countries from dealing with any Iranian bank. Secretary of the
Treasury Geithner announced that day that the Administration had acted under Section 311 of the
USA Patriot Act (31 U.S.C. 5318A) to identify Iran as a “jurisdiction of primary money
laundering concern”29—that its financial system, including the Central Bank, constitutes a threat
to governments or financial institutions that do business with these banks. Banks that do business
with the Iranian financial system were declared at risk of supporting Iran’s pursuit of nuclear
weapons, its support for terrorism, and its efforts to deceive financial institutions and evade
sanctions. The designation carried no immediate penalty, per se, but it imposes additional
requirements on U.S. banks to ensure against improper Iranian access to the U.S. financial
system. It was also intended to cause foreign banks to cease doing business with Iranian banks.

29 http://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg1367.aspx.
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Sanctioning Against Dealings With Iran’s Central Bank/Section
1245 of the FY2012 National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 112-81)

The November 21, 2011, designation, above, did not satisfy those in Congress who believed that
additional action was needed to cut off Iran’s Central Bank. That view was based on information
that it was helping other Iranian banks circumvent the U.S. and U.N. banking pressure, and on the
basis that it is the prime conduit to pay Iran for oil shipments. Some argued the Treasury
Department should designate the Central Bank as a proliferation entity under Executive Order
13382 or a terrorism supporting entity under Executive Order 13224, but the Administration did
not do so.
In November 2011, provisions to sanction foreign banks that deal with Iran’s Central Bank were
incorporated into a broader Iran sanctions bill, H.R. 1905, discussed below. A separate Central
Bank sanctions provision was introduced by Senator Mark Kirk and Senator Robert Menendez as
an amendment to a FY2012 national defense authorization bill. The provision was modified
slightly in conference action on the bill—H.R. 1540—enacted and signed on December 31, 2011
(P.L. 111-81). The initiative built on an August 9, 2011, a letter signed by 92 Senators was sent to
President Obama urging “a comprehensive strategy to pressure Iran’s financial system by
imposing sanctions” on the Central Bank of Iran.
The provision, Section 1245 of P.L. 112-81, provides for the following:
• Requires the President to prevent a foreign bank from opening an account in the
United States—or impose strict limitations on existing U.S. accounts—if that
bank processes payments through Iran’s Central Bank.
• The provision applies to any transaction with the Central Bank of Iran 60 days
after enactment.
• The provision applies to transactions to pay for purchases of Iranian oil only after
180 days. It also applies only if the President certifies to Congress that the oil
market is adequately supplied and that the parent country of the foreign bank in
question has not significantly reduced its purchases of oil from Iran. If such
certification is made, the exemption applies to any transaction with the Central
Bank, not only for oil. The certification is to be issued 90 days after enactment,
based on a report by the Energy Information Administration to be completed 60
days after enactment. (That report was issued on February 29, 2012, saying “EIA
estimates that the world oil market has become increasingly tight over the first
two months of this year.”)
• The provision applies to a foreign Central Bank only if the transaction with Iran’s
Central Bank is for oil purchases, and only after 180 days.
• Provides for a renewable waiver of 120 days duration if the President determines
that doing so is in the national security interest.
• On February 27, 2012, the Department of the Treasury announced regulations to
implement this law.
The Administration had initially opposed the provision. In testimony, Undersecretary Cohen told
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on December 2, 2011, that the Administration strongly
opposed the provision because it could lead to a rise in oil prices that would actually benefit Iran.
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Yet, the Administration later saw value in using the provision to sanction Iran. In the signing
statement on the overall bill, President Obama indicated he would implement the provision so as
not to damage U.S. relations with partner countries, such as Japan and South Korea. Furthermore,
key U.S. partners Britain and Canada themselves cut off dealings with Iran’s Central Bank in late
November 2011, as the provision was under consideration.
Implementation/Exemptions Issued
Implementation of the provision has been complicated by the fact that there is no firm definition
of “significant” reduction that would cause a country to qualify for this exemption, giving the
Administration substantial flexibility in dealing with foreign governments on implementation. On
January 19, 2012, the Senators who drafted the provision wrote to Treasury Secretary Geithner
agreeing with outside experts that the Treasury Department should define “significant reduction”
as an 18% purchase reduction based on total price paid (not just volumes), and that reductions be
continuous as compared with each prior six month period.30
The EU embargo on purchases of Iranian oil, announced January 23, 2012 and to take full effect
by July 1, 2012, implied that virtually all EU countries would obtain exemptions for having
“significantly reduced” oil buys from Iran. On March 20, 2012, the Secretary of State announced
the first group of eleven countries that had achieved an exemption for significantly reducing oil
purchases from Iran: Belgium; the Czech Republic; France; Germany; Greece; Italy; Japan; the
Netherlands; Poland; Spain; and Britain.
However, 17 EU countries were not given exemptions. Some of them already buy no oil from
Iran and cannot therefore “significantly reduce” their oil buys from Iran any further. Under the
provision, these countries might not achieve an exemption from the provision, and they fear that
the provision amounts to a de facto U.S. effort to enforce a total ban on EU trade with Iran. In
addition, the exemptions that were granted are evaluated every 180 days, meaning countries must
continue to reduce oil buys from Iran to retain the exemption. South Korea is known to be
actively negotiating with the United States in order to achieve an exemption. The three other large
Iranian oil buyers—China, India, and Turkey—have not pledged to cut oil purchases from Iran. In
addition, trade that is conducted in cash or barter arrangements would not risk sanctions under the
provision.
Other early opposition from EU and other countries to the concept of sanctioning Iran’s Central
Bank was based on humanitarian grounds. One of the Central Bank’s roles is to keep Iran’s
currency, the rial, stable. It does so by using hard currency to buy rials to raise the currency value,
or to sell rials to bring the value down. An unstable currency could harm Iran’s ability to import
some needed foodstuffs and medical products, according to those opposing that sanction.
February 6, 2012, Executive Order on the Central Bank
Possibly in part to address Congressional sentiment for extensive sanctions on the Central Bank,
on February 6, 2012, the President issued an Executive order imposing further sanctions on that
institution. The Order requires that any assets of the Central Bank of Iran be blocked (impounded)
by U.S. financial institutions. U.S. financial institutions previously were required to merely refuse

30 Text of letter from Senators Mark Kirk and Robert Menendez to Secretary Geithner. January 19, 2012.
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such transactions with the Central Bank, or return funds to it, but the Order requires them to
henceforth impound such assets.
Terrorism List Designation-Related Sanctions
Several U.S. sanctions are in effect as a result of Iran’s presence on the U.S. “terrorism list.” The
list was established by Section 6(j) of the Export Administration Act of 1979 (P.L. 96-72, as
amended), sanctioning countries determined to have provided repeated support for acts of
international terrorism. Iran was added to the list in January 1984, following the October 1983
bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Lebanon perpetrated by elements that later became
Hezbollah). Sanctions imposed as a consequence include a ban on U.S. foreign aid to Iran;
restrictions on U.S. exports to Iran of dual use items; and requires the United States to vote
against international loans to Iran.
• The terrorism list designation restricts sales of U.S. dual use items (Export
Administration Act, as continued through presidential authorities under the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act, IEEPA, as implemented by
executive orders), and, under other laws, bans direct U.S. financial assistance
(§620A of the Foreign Assistance Act, FAA, P.L. 87-195) and arms sales (§40 of
the Arms Export Control Act, P.L. 95-92, as amended), and requires the United
States to vote to oppose multilateral lending to the designated countries (§327 of
the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, P.L. 104-132).
Waivers are provided under these laws, but successive foreign aid appropriations
laws since the late 1980s ban direct assistance to Iran (loans, credits, insurance,
Ex-Im Bank credits) without providing for a waiver.
• Section 307 of the FAA (added in 1985) names Iran as unable to benefit from
U.S. contributions to international organizations, and require proportionate cuts if
these institutions work in Iran. No waiver is provided for.
• The Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (§§325 and 326 of P.L. 104-
132) requires the President to withhold U.S. foreign assistance to any country
that provides to a terrorism list country foreign assistance or arms. Waivers are
provided.
U.S. sanctions laws do not bar disaster aid. The United States donated $125,000, through relief
agencies, to help victims of two earthquakes in Iran (February and May 1997); $350,000 worth of
aid to the victims of a June 22, 2002, earthquake; and $5.7 million in assistance (out of total
governmental pledges of about $32 million) for the victims of the December 2003 earthquake in
Bam, Iran, which killed as many as 40,000 people. The United States military flew in 68,000
kilograms of supplies to Bam. In the Bam case, there was also a temporary exemption made in
the regulations to allow for a general licensing (no need for a specific license) for donations to
Iran of humanitarian goods by American citizens and organizations. Those exemptions were
extended several times but expired in March 2004.
Executive Order 13224: Sanctioning Terrorism Supporting Entities
Executive Order 13324 (September 23, 2001) authorizes the President to freeze the assets of and
bar U.S. transactions with entities determined to be supporting international terrorism. This order,
issued two weeks after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, under the authority
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of the IEEPA, the National Emergencies Act, the U.N. Participation Act of 1945, and Section 301
of the U.S. Code, was intended to primarily target Al Qaeda-related entities. However, it has
increasingly been applied to Iranian entities. Such Iran-related entities named and sanctioned
under this order are in Table 6, which also contains the names of Iranian entities sanctioned under
other orders and under United Nations resolutions.
Among recent Iran-related designations under this Order, on July 28, 2011, the Treasury
Department designated six Iran-based members of Al Qaeda under this order for allegedly serving
as financiers for Al Qaeda. On October 12, 2011, the Treasury Department designated Mahan Air,
an airline operating in Iran and the Persian Gulf region, under this Order, for allegedly helping the
Qods Force (the arm of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard that supports pro-Iranian movements abroad)
ship weapons and other gear. On March 27, 2012, the Treasury Dept. designated five Iranian and
one Nigerian entity for allegedly attempting to ship Iranian weapons to Gambia and to Syria.
Proliferation-Related U.S. Sanctions
Iran is prevented from receiving advanced technology from the United States under relevant and
Iran-specific anti-proliferation laws31 and by Executive Order 13382 (June 28, 2005). Some of
these laws and executive measures seek to penalize foreign firms and countries that provide
equipment to Iran’s WMD programs.
Iran-Iraq Arms Nonproliferation Act
The Iran-Iraq Arms Nonproliferation Act (P.L. 102-484) imposes a number of sanctions on
foreign entities that supply Iran with WMD technology or “destabilizing numbers and types of
conventional weapons.” Sanctions imposed on violating entities include a ban, for two years, on
U.S. government procurement from that entity, and a two-year ban on licensing U.S. exports to
that entity. A sanction to ban imports to the United States from the entity is authorized.
If the violator is determined to be a foreign country, sanctions to be imposed are a one-year ban
on U.S. assistance to that country; a one-year requirement that the United States vote against
international lending to it; a one-year suspension of U.S. co-production agreements with the
country; a one-year suspension of technical exchanges with the country in military or dual use
technology; and a one-year ban on sales of U.S. arms to the country. The President is also
authorized to deny the country most-favored-nation trade status; and to impose a ban on U.S.
trade with the country.
The Iran-Iraq Arms Nonproliferation Act (§1603) also provides for a “presumption of denial” for
all dual use exports to Iran (which would include computer software). A waiver to permit such
exports, on a case-by-case basis, is provided for.

31 Such laws include the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 and the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-58).
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Iran-North Korea-Syria Nonproliferation Act
The Iran Nonproliferation Act (P.L. 106-178), now called the Iran-North Korea-Syria Non-
Proliferation Act (INKSNA) authorizes sanctions on foreign persons (individuals or corporations,
not countries or governments) that are determined by the Administration to have assisted Iran’s
WMD programs. It bans U.S. extraordinary payments to the Russian Aviation and Space Agency
in connection with the international space station unless the President can certify that the agency
or entities under its control had not transferred any WMD or missile technology to Iran within the
year prior.32 (A Continuing Resolution for FY2009, which funded the U.S. government through
March 2009, waived this law to allow NASA to continue to use Russian vehicles to access the
International Space Station.) Pending legislation in the 112th Congress, discussed later, would
amend INKSNA.
Executive Order 13382
Executive Order 13382 (June 28, 2005) allows the President to block the assets of proliferators of
weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and their supporters under the authority granted by the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.), the National
Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.), and Section 301 of Title 3, United States Code. As is
the case with Executive Order 13224, this Order has been used extensively to sanction Iran-
related entities; Table 6 lists Iran-related entities sanctioned under the order. As an example, the
IRGC is named as a proliferation entity under the Order.
Among recent designations, on January 23, 2012, one of Iran’s largest banks and one of the few
remaining that does substantial business with the international financial sector, Bank Tejarat, was
designated. Also designated that day was a Belarus-based affiliate, Trade Capital Bank.
Foreign Aid Restrictions for Suppliers of Iran
In addition, successive foreign aid appropriations punish the Russian Federation for assisting Iran
by withholding 60% of any U.S. assistance to the Russian Federation unless it terminates
technical assistance to Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missiles programs.
U.S. Efforts to Promote Divestment
A growing trend not only in Congress but in several states is to require or call for or require
divestment of shares of firms that have invested in Iran’s energy sector (at the same levels
considered sanctionable under the Iran Sanctions Act).33 The concept of these sanctions is to
express the view of Western and other democracies that Iran is an outcast internationally. A

32 The provision contains certain exceptions to ensure the safety of astronauts, but it nonetheless threatened to limit
U.S. access to the international space station after April 2006, when Russia started charging the United States for
transportation on its Soyuz spacecraft. Legislation in the 109th Congress (S. 1713, P.L. 109-112) amended the provision
in order to facilitate continued U.S. access and extended INA sanctions provisions to Syria.
33 For information on the steps taken by individual states, see National Conference of State Legislatures. State
Divestment Legislation.
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divestment provisions was contained in CISADA (P.L. 111-195)—in particular providing a “safe
harbor” for investment managers who sell shares of firms that invest in Iran’s energy sector.
Earlier, in the 110th and 111th Congresses, several bills, including H.R. 1400, H.R. 2347 (passed
by the House on July 31, 2007), H.R. 1327, H.R. 1357, S. 1430, and others contained divestment
provisions.
U.S. Sanctions Intended to Support Democratic
Change in Iran or Alter Iran’s Foreign Policy

A trend since the June 2009 Iran election dispute has been to promote the prospects for the
domestic opposition in Iran. Proposals to target the Revolutionary Guard for sanctions, discussed
throughout, represent one facet of that trend. The IRGC is involved in Iran’s WMD programs but
it is also the key instrument through which the regime has suppressed the pro-democracy
movement. Several measures to support the opposition’s ability to communicate, to reduce the
regime’s ability to monitor or censor Internet communications and to identify and sanction
Iranian human rights abusers, were included in CISADA.
Earlier legislation, the Iran Freedom Support Act (IFSA, P.L. 109-293), represented a
congressional effort to promote the prospects for opponents of the regime. That law authorized
“sums as may be necessary” to assist Iranians who are “dedicated” to “democratic values … and
the adoption of a democratic form of government in Iran”; and “advocates the adherence by Iran
to nonproliferation regimes….”
Expanding Internet and Communications Freedoms
Some Members have focused on expanding Internet freedom in Iran or preventing the Iranian
government from using the Internet to identify opponents. Subtitle D of the FY2010 Defense
Authorization Act (P.L. 111-84), called the “VOICE” (Victims of Iranian Censorship) Act
contained several provisions to increase U.S. broadcasting to Iran and to identify (in a report to be
submitted 180 days after enactment, or April 25, 2009) companies that are selling Iran technology
equipment that it can use to suppress or monitor the internet usage of Iranians. The act authorized
funds to document Iranian human rights abuses since the June 12, 2009, presidential election.
Another provision (§1241) required an Administration report, not later than January 31, 2010, on
U.S. enforcement of sanctions against Iran, and the effect of those sanctions on Iran.
In the 111th Congress, the “Reduce Iranian Cyber-Suppression Act,” (S. 1475 and H.R. 3284)
was incorporated into CISADA. It authorizes the President to ban U.S. government contracts with
foreign companies that sell technology that Iran could use to monitor or control Iranian usage of
the internet. Another provision of CISADA (§103(b)(2)) exempts from the U.S. export ban on
Iran equipment to help Iranians communicate and use the Internet. The provisions were directed,
in part, against firms, including a joint venture between Nokia (Finland) and Siemens (Germany),
reportedly sold Internet monitoring and censorship technology to Iran in 2008.34 Perhaps to avoid
further embarrassment, Siemens announced on January 27, 2010, that it would stop signing new

34 Rhoads, Christopher. “Iran’s Web Spying Aided by Western Technology.” Wall Street Journal, June 22, 2009.
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business deals in Iran as of mid-2010.35 There is some concern that a large Chinese firm, Huawei,
might have sold Iran Internet monitoring or censorship gear as part of its work in Iran’s
communications industry although there is no clear information that it has done so.
Implementation
In line with this trend, on March 8, 2010, OFAC amended the Iran Transactions Regulations that
implement the U.S.-Iran trade ban to provide for a general license for providing to Iranians free
mass market software in order to facilitate internet communications. The ruling appeared to
incorporate the major features of a proposal in the 111th Congress, H.R. 4301, the “Iran Digital
Empowerment Act.” The OFAC determination required a waiver of the provision of the Iran-Iraq
Arms Nonproliferation Act (§1606 waiver provision) discussed above.
The Administration took a further step on March 20, 2012, announcing a new licensing policy to
promote Internet freedom in Iran. The announcement seemed to reflect President Obama’s
Nowruz message that same day, saying the United States is committed to promoting Internet
freedom in Iran against counter-efforts by the regime. The Treasury Department announced that
several additional types of software and information technology products would be able to be
exported to Iran under general license, including: personal communications, personal data
storage, browsers, plug-ins, document readers, and free mobile applications related to personal
communications. The exports are provided the products are available at no cost to the user. 36
To counter some of the efforts above, and among other measures, in 2011 the Iranian government
established a “cyber police” force. Part of the force’s duties are to sensitize young Iranians to the
government view that Western countries are using the Internet to undermine Iran’s Islamic values
and government.37
Measures to Sanction Human Rights Abuses and
Promote the Opposition

Another part of the effort to help Iran’s opposition has been legislation to sanction regime
officials involved in suppressing the domestic opposition in Iran. Senator John McCain proposed
to offer amendments to S. 2799 (the Senate version of what became H.R. 2194) to focus on
banning travel and freezing assets of those Iranians determined to be human rights abusers. These
provisions were included in the conference report on CISADA. The provisions were similar to
those of Senator McCain’s earlier stand alone bill, S. 3022, the “Iran Human Rights Sanctions
Act.” Companion measures in the House were H.R. 4647 and H.R. 4649.
On September 29, 2010, the Administration implemented the CISADA provision when President
Obama signed an Executive Order (13553) providing for the CISADA sanctions against Iranians
determined to be responsible for or complicit in post-2009 Iran election human rights abuses.
Along with the order, an initial group of eight Iranian officials were penalized, including
Mohammad Ali Jafari, the commander-in-chief of the IRGC, and several other officials who were

35 End, Aurelia. “Siemens Quits Iran Amid Mounting Diplomatic Tensions.” Agence France Press, January 27, 2010.
36 Fact Sheet: Treasury Issues Interpretive Guidance and Statement of Licensing Policy on Internet Freedom in Iran,.
March 20, 2012.
37 Thomas Erdbink. “Iran’s Cyber Police Battle the Lure of the Internet.” Washington Post, October 30. 2011.
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in key security or judicial positions at the time of the June 2009 election and aftermath. Several
additional officials and security force entities have been sanctioned since, as shown in the table at
the end of this paper. Under State Department interpretations of the executive order, if an entity is
designated, all members of that entity are ineligible for visas to enter the United States.38 Similar
sanctions against many of these same officials—as well as several others—have been imposed by
the European Union.
Executive Order 13438 and 13572: Sanctioning Iranian Involvement
in the Region

Some sanctions have been imposed to try to punish Iran’s attempts to exert influence in the
region. On July 7, 2007, President Bush issued Executive Order 13438. The order sanctions
Iranian persons who are posing a threat to Iraqi stability, presumably by providing arms or funds
to Shiite militias there. Some persons sanctioned have been Qods Force officers, some have been
Iraqi Shiite militia-linked figures, and some entities have been sanctioned as well.
Executive Order 13572, issued on April 29, 2011, targets those responsible for human rights
abuses and repression of the Syrian people. The Qods Force and a number of Iranian Qods Force
officers, including Qods Force commander Qasem Soleimani, have been sanctioned under this
Order (and under other Executive Orders, as shown in the table at the end). The Iranians
sanctioned allegedly helped Syria commit abuses against protesters and repress its domestic
opposition movement that has conducted nationwide demonstration since March 2011. In
September 2011, the European Union similarly sanctioned the Qods Force for its purported
assistance to Syria’s repression.
Separate Visa Ban
On July 8, 2011, in conjunction with Britain, the United States imposed visa restrictions on more
than 50 Iranian officials for participating in political repression in Iran. The State Department
announcement stated that the names of those subject to the ban would not be released because
visa records are confidential. The action was taken under the authorities of Section 212(a)(3)(C)
of the Immigration and Nationality Act, which renders inadmissible to the United States a foreign
person whose activities could have serious consequences for the United States.
Blocked Iranian Property and Assets
Iranian leaders continue to assert that the United States is holding Iranian assets, and that this is
an impediment to improved relations. A U.S.-Iran Claims Tribunal at the Hague continues to
arbitrate cases resulting from the 1980 break in relations and freezing of some of Iran’s assets.
Major cases yet to be decided center on hundreds of Foreign Military Sales (FMS) cases between
the United States and the Shah’s regime, which Iran claims it paid for but were unfulfilled. A
reported $400 million in proceeds from the resale of that equipment was placed in a DOD FMS
account and may remain in this escrow account, although DoD has not provided CRS with a
precise balance. Additionally, according to the Treasury Department “Terrorist Assets report” for

38 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Office of Public Affairs. Treasury Sanctions Iranian Security Forces for Human
Rights Abuses, June 9, 2011.
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2010, about $48 million in Iranian diplomatic property and accounts remains blocked—this
amount includes proceeds from rents received on the former Iranian embassy in Washington, DC,
and 10 other properties in several states, along with 6 related bank accounts.39
Other past disputes include the mistaken U.S. shoot-down on July 3, 1988, of an Iranian Airbus
passenger jet (Iran Air flight 655), for which the United States, in accordance with an ICJ
judgment, paid Iran $61.8 million in compensation ($300,000 per wage earning victim, $150,000
per nonwage earner) for the 248 Iranians killed. The United States has not compensated Iran for
the airplane itself. The Bush Administration opposed a terrorism lawsuit against Iran by victims
of the U.S. Embassy Tehran seizure on the grounds of diplomatic obligation.40
In another case, there are reportedly about $2 billion in assets held by Citigroup, deposited there
by Luxembourg-based Clearstream Banking SA. The assets reputedly belong to Iran and have
been frozen and held against terrorism judgments against Iran. Iran’s Central Bank reportedly is
preparing to file a motion in U.S. court to unfreeze the assets.
U.N. Sanctions
The U.S. sanctions on Iran are more extensive than those imposed, to date, by the United Nations
Security Council or by individual foreign countries or groups of countries, such as the European
Union. U.N. sanctions apply to all U.N. member states, and therefore have tended, in other cases,
to be more effective than unilateral sanctions. There is increasing convergence among all these
varying sets of sanctions.
As part of a multilateral process of attempting to convince Iran to choose the path of negotiations
or face further penalty, during 2006-2008, three U.N. Security Council resolutions—1737, 1747,
and 1803—imposed sanctions primarily on Iran’s weapons of mass destruction (WMD)
infrastructure. After failed negotiations with Iran during 2009, Resolution 1929 was adopted on
June 9, 2010, by a vote of 12-2 (Turkey and Brazil), with one abstention (Lebanon). (Iranian
entities and persons sanctioned by the United Nations are in Table 6.)
The main points of Resolution 1929 are:41
• It added several firms affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard firms to the list of
sanctioned entities.
• It made mandatory a ban on travel for Iranian persons named in it and in previous
resolutions—including those Iranians for whom there was a nonbinding travel
ban in previous resolutions.
• It gave countries the authorization to inspect any shipments—and to dispose of
its cargo—if the shipments are suspected to carry contraband items. However,
inspections on the high seas are subject to concurrence by the country that owns

39 http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Documents/tar2010.pdf.
40 See CRS Report RL31258, Suits Against Terrorist States by Victims of Terrorism, by Jennifer K. Elsea.
41 Text of the resolution is at http://www.isis-online.org/uploads/isis-reports/documents/
Draft_resolution_on_Iran_annexes.pdf.
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that ship. This provision is modeled after a similar provision imposed on North
Korea, which did cause that country to reverse some of its shipments.
• It prohibited countries from allowing Iran to invest in uranium mining and related
nuclear technologies, or nuclear-capable ballistic missile technology.
• It banned sales to Iran of most categories of heavy arms to Iran and requests
restraint in sales of light arms, but does not bar sales of missiles not on the “U.N.
Registry of Conventional Arms.”
• It required countries to insist that their companies refrain from doing business
with Iran if there is reason to believe that such business could further Iran’s
WMD programs.
• It requested, but did not mandate, that countries prohibit Iranian banks to open in
their countries, or for their banks to open in Iran, if doing so could contribute to
Iran’s WMD activities.
• It authorized the establishment of a “panel of experts” to assist the U.N. sanctions
committee in implementing the Resolution and previous Iran resolutions, and to
suggest ways of more effective implementation.
• It did not mandate a ban on: shipping insurance for shipments to Iran;
international investment in Iran’s energy sector; the provision of trade credits to
Iran; or all financial dealings with Iranian banks.
Table 2. Summary of Provisions of U.N. Resolutions on Iran Nuclear Program
(1737, 1747, 1803, and 1929)
Freeze the assets of over 80 named Iranian persons and entities, including Bank Sepah, and several corporate affiliates
of the Revolutionary Guard. (Entities named in annexes to each of the resolutions.)
Prohibit transfer to Iran of nuclear, missile, and dual use items to Iran, except for use in light-water reactors
Prohibit Iran from exporting arms or WMD-useful technology
Prohibit Iran from investing abroad in uranium mining, related nuclear technologies or nuclear capable ballistic missile
technology (1929)
Require Iran to suspend uranium enrichment, and to refrain from any development of ballistic missiles that are
nuclear capable (1929)
Require that countries ban the travel of over 40 named Iranians
Mandates that countries not export major combat systems to Iran (1929)
Calls for “vigilance” (a nonbinding call to cut off business) with respect to all Iranian banks, particularly Bank Melli and
Bank Saderat.
Calls for vigilance (voluntary restraint) with respect to providing international lending to Iran and providing trade
credits and other financing and financial interactions.
Cal s on countries to inspect cargoes carried by Iran Air Cargo and Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines—or by any
ships in national or international waters—if there are indications they carry cargo banned for carriage to Iran.
Searches in international waters would require concurrence of the country where the ship is registered. (1929)
A Sanctions Committee, composed of the 15 members of the Security Council, monitors Implementation of all Iran
sanctions and collects and disseminates information on Iranian violations and other entities involved in banned
activities. A “panel of experts” is empowered by 1929 to make recommendations for improved enforcement.
Source: Text of U.N. Security Council resolutions 1737, 1747, 1803, and 1929. http://www.un.org. More
information on specific provisions of each of these resolutions and the nuclear negotiations with Iran is in CRS
Report. CRS Report RL32048, Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses, by Kenneth Katzman.
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International Implementation and Compliance
U.S. and European/allied approaches had been gradually converging since 2002, when the
nuclear issue came to the fore. As of 2010 an unprecedented degree of global consensus has
emerged to pressure Iran. Many U.S. allies - including several neighbors of Iran, such as UAE
and Saudi Arabia - have joined a U.S.-led informal coalition called the “like minded countries” to
pressure Iran. Those outside the “like minded countries” grouping are generally complying with
the provisions of U.N. sanctions. This international adoption of sanctions is attributable to the
perception that the sanctions are not purely punitive, and in part to the growing concerns of U.S.
partner countries about Iran’s nuclear advancement. Some countries have joined the burgeoning
sanctions regime not necessarily out of conviction of the efficacy of sanctions but rather as a
means of perhaps heading off unwanted military action by the United States or Israel against
Iran’s nuclear facilities.
European Union and Other Western States
The European Union and other Western allies of the United States have been increasingly
aligning their sanctions with those of the United States. Among the latest actions, on November
21, 2011, in a concerted action with those taken by the U.S. Treasury Department (see above
under §311 of the Patriot Act), Britain and Canada announced they would no longer do business
with Iran’s financial institutions, including Iran’s Central Bank. Iran’s parliament subsequently
voted to downgrade relations with Britain, a move that, on November 29, 2011, contributed to the
overrunning of the British Embassy in Tehran by pro-government students, with at least the
partial apparent complicity of regime security forces. That attack prompted Britain to give all
Iranian diplomats 48 hours to leave Britain, and precipitated a European Union meeting on
December 1, 2011. At that meeting, the EU designated an additional 180 Iranian entities, mostly
those linked to the Revolutionary Guard, as subject to assets freezes and travel bans. One of the
entities is the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL).
Still, some EU countries criticized some aspects of the U.S. sanctions against Iran’s Central Bank,
discussed above, as de facto barring even legal trade with Iran, such as in automobiles, by
blocking acceptable payments mechanisms. A comparison between U.S., U.N., and EU sanctions
against Iran is contained in the chart below, although noting that there are differing legal bases
and authorities for these sanctions.
EU Oil Embargo and Central Bank of Iran Cutoff
The EU has joined the United States in targeting Iran’s lifeline, its oil exports, for sanctions. At
the January 23, 2012 EU meeting, the EU decided to:
• Refrain from new contracts to purchase Iranian oil and to wind down existing
contracts from the present until July 1, 2012. There would be a review on May 1,
2011, about the effect of the move on the EU’s vulnerable economies, such as
Spain, Italy, and Greece, which each get more than 10% of their imported oil
from Iran and have the greatest need of lining up alternative supplies. Britain and
Germany only get about 1% of their oil from Iran, and France about 4%.
Collectively, the EU buys about 600,000 barrels per day of Iranian oil, about a
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quarter of Iran’s total oil exports, which presumably will now be supplied by
Saudi Arabia or other suppliers that have spare production capacity.
• Stop all trade with Iran in gold, precious metals, diamonds, and petrochemical
products.
• Freeze the assets of Iran’s Central Bank, although transactions would still be
permitted for approved legitimate trade.
• Freeze the assets of several Iranian firms involved in shipping arms to Syria or
which support shipping by IRISL, and cease doing business with port operator
Tidewater (see above).
As discussed above, partly as a consequence of the EU decision, on March 20, 2012 ten EU
countries were granted exemptions from any U.S. sanctions imposed under the P.L. 112-81
provision to sanction banks that transact business with Iran’s Central Bank.
SWIFT Cutoff
The Belgium-based SWIFT organization (Society for Worldwide International Financial
Transfers) announced in February 2012 that it would abide by any EU decision to expel Iranian
banks blacklisted by the EU (about 18 Iranian banks that meet that criteria are members of the
network) from its membership. Such a move was requested and, as of March 17, 2012, SWIFT
ended transactions with these Iranian banks.
Japan and South Korea
Japan and South Korea have joined the international coalition that is pressuring Iran, in part to
maintain their close relations with the United States, but also out of concern about Iran’s nuclear
program. In September 2010, Japan and South Korea announced Iran sanctions similar to those of
the EU, including limiting trade financing for Iran, limiting new banking relations with Iran,
sanctioning numerous named Iranian entities, and restricting new projects in Iran’s energy sector.
On December 16, 2011, South Korea announced new sanctions to align policy with the
November 2011 U.S. decision to sanction sales to Iran of energy sector equipment.
Both countries have announced they will cooperate with the United States and the EU targeting of
Iran’s oil exports, but both are worried about threats to their oil supplies and, therefore, their
economies. Their cooperation is considered by U.S. officials essential to overall U.S. strategy of
cutting Iran’s exports of oil substantially because each gets about 10% of its oil from Iran. Both
countries have been concerned that the U.S. sanctions against dealings with Iran’s Central Bank
would result in a sudden end to their ability to pay for Iranian oil and that this would lead to a
spike in world oil prices or a cutoff of their supplies. As a result of negotiations with the United
States, Japan has reduced its imports of Iranian oil by about 20% (70,000 bpd), and was granted
an exemption under P.L. 112-81 on March 20, 2012. Japan hopes the exemption will benefit its
banks, such as Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Mizuho, and Sumitomo Mitsui, that process
transactions with Iran’s Central Bank. 42 South Korea is reportedly still negotiating with U.S.
officials the size and rate of its reductions in oil buys from Iran, and observers expect it will likely
approximate those of Japan and earn a similar exemption under P.L. 112-81.

42 “Japan May Cut Iran Oil Imports by Over 20 Percent” Reuters, February 23, 2012.
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India
India’s record of cooperation with multilateral sanctions against Iran is mixed. India has generally
been considered friendly toward Iran, and many experts were surprised when India’s central bank,
in late December 2010, announced that it would no longer use a regional body, the Asian Clearing
Union, to handle transactions with Iran. The Asian Clearing Union, based in Tehran, was set up in
the 1970s by the United Nations to ease commerce among Asian nations. There have been
allegations in recent years that Iran might be using the Clearing Union to handle transactions so
as to avoid limitations imposed by European and other banks, and India’s move followed
President Obama’s visit there in November 2010. With India’s purchases of about 350,000 barrels
per day of Iranian oil (about $11 billion worth of oil in 2011) made difficult by the move, in
February 2011, India and Iran agreed to use an Iranian bank, Europaisch-Iranische Handelsbank
(EIH) to clear the payments. On May 23, 2011, the EU named EIH and about 100 other entities as
Iran proliferation-related activities, rendering India and Iran again in search of an alternative
payments mechanism. With approximately $6.3 billion in oil payments due Iran building up in an
escrow account, in July 2011 Iran threatened to reduce or cut off entirely oil shipments to India.
In late July 2011, the two identified Turkey’s Halkbank as an acceptable processor, and, on
September 4, 2011, Iran’s Central Bank Governor said India had fully settled its debt. The U.S.
law sanctioning dealings with Iran’s Central Bank led Halkbank in January 2012 to express the
view that it might not be able to continue handling payments to Iran.
With the payments mechanisms largely closed or closing, India’s position on whether it will
cooperate with a broader oil embargo on Iran remains in doubt as of late March 2012. India has
used the payments difficulties to force concessions from Iran, including an Iranian acceptance of
payment for about 45% of the oil sales in rupees, India’s local currency but which is not
convertible. The remainder might be settled through barter trade or Indian investment in Iran, and
some might be settled in gold. The Iranian concessions have made it attractive for India to refuse
U.S. efforts to persuade it to cut its oil purchases from the baseline level of about 350,000 barrels
per day. In addition, India sent a large trade delegation to Iran (March 10-14, 2012) to discuss
new trade opportunities in goods not subject to international sanctions, reportedly agreeing to
some additional trade in commodities such as sugar. Some Members of Congress wrote to India’s
Ambassador in Washington, D.C. on March 1, 2012 urging India to join U.S. and EU-led efforts
to curb Iran’s oil exports.
China and Russia
The position of Russia, China, and several other countries—that they will impose only those
sanctions specifically required by U.N. Security Council resolutions—has been of concern to
several Members of Congress. Members and outside experts have expressed concern that Chinese
firms, in particular, might move to fill the void in Iran’s energy industry left by vacating European
firms (“backfill”), but Administration officials say they have not seen evidence of such a trend.
Some Members have also criticized successive Administrations for refusing to sanction Chinese
companies for what appear to be clear violations of ISA and other U.S. sanctions provisions.
Russia is an oil exporter itself and a need to preserve oil imports from Iran is therefore not a
factor in its Iran policy calculations. However, Russia has earned hard currency from large
projects in Iran, such as the Bushehr nuclear reactor, and it also seeks not to provoke Iran into
supporting Islamist movements in the Muslim regions of Russia and the Central Asian states that
remain politically close to Moscow.
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China
Like India, China appears to be seeking to take advantage of the sanctions for its own purposes,
and in so doing signaling to Iran that it disapproves of its behavior. China has said it will not
significantly reduce its oil purchases from their 2011 average level of about 550,000 barrels per
day, despite the threat of the U.S. sanctions under P.L. 112-81). Oil industry observers say that
China cut its oil buys from Iran by about 50% for January 2012, apparently in an attempt to force
Iran to discount the oil it sells to China. The reduction could have been caused by a disagreement
between Iran and Unipec, one of China’s top importers—a disagreement reportedly resolved in
mid-February 2012 and which is likely to cause China’s imports from Iran to return to baseline
levels. Some reports in late March 2012 suggested another Chinese refiner, Sinopec, might cut its
purchases from Iran.
China may be less vulnerable to any U.S. sanctions than is Japan or South Korea. China buys
about 20% of Iran’s total oil exports—with a value of about $16 billion in 2011—making it Iran’s
largest single customer. That amount has been sufficient to offset the approximately $12 billion in
goods Iran buys from China, meaning that China has to settle only this $4 billion owed to Iran.
Treasury Department officials say China does not make extensive use of payments through Iran’s
Central Bank, and press and other reports say that the $4 billion is being largely settled in local
currency or with additional Chinese exports of goods.
An even more significant concern is that China may be refusing or failing to prevent Iran from
acquiring weapons and WMD technology. Secretary of State Clinton singled out China on
January 19, 2011, as not enforcing all aspects of international sanctions that bar sales of most
nuclear-related equipment to Iran; the comment came of the eve of the state visit to the United
States by President Hu Jintao. On March 9, 2011, State Department Special Adviser for Non-
Proliferation and Arms Control, Robert Einhorn, said Iran may be working with Chinese firms to
obtain sensitive technology useful for nuclear weapons development. In some cases, Iran has
been able, according to some reports, to obtain sophisticated technology from U.S. firms.43
Turkey
Turkey is a large buyer of Iranian oil; in 2011, it averaged 180,000 bpd. Turkey also buys natural
gas from Iran through their mutual pipeline. Turkey, which has sometimes sought to mediate
between Iran and the Western countries, has said it will not reduce its oil buys from Iran in
response to U.S. sanctions on Iran’s Central Bank. Yet, Turkey has, on several occasions, blocked
or impounded Iranian arms and other contraband shipments bound for Syria or Lebanese
Hezbollah.
Persian Gulf and Other Middle Eastern States
The Persian Gulf countries are, themselves, oil exporters, and their role is evaluated for their
potential to compensate for reduction in other country purchases of oil from Iran. Although those
Gulf states with spare capacity appear willing to fully supply the market, their cooperation with

43 Warrick, Joby. “Iran Using Fronts to Get Bomb Parts From U.S.” Washington Post, January 11, 2009; Institute for
Science and International Security. “Iranian Entities’ Illicit Military Procurement Networks.” David Albright, Paul
Brannan, and Andrea Scheel. January 12, 2009.
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other U.S. sanctions against Iran has tended to be mixed. Most experts attribute this record to
strategic considerations colored by wariness and suspicion of Iran, which are discussed in detail
in CRS Report RL32048, Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses, by Kenneth Katzman. That
paper discusses the relations between Iran and other Middle Eastern states such as Syria.
Still, the UAE is very closely watched by U.S. officials because of its historic extensive business
dealings with Iran. U.S. officials offered substantial praise for decision announced March 1, 2012,
by Dubai-based Noor Islamic Bank to end transactions with Iran. Iran reportedly uses the bank to
process a substantial portion of its oil payments.
Latin America
Iran is looking to several Latin American countries, including Venezuela, Cuba, Ecuador,
Nicaragua, and Bolivia, to try to reduce the effects of international sanctions. Iran believes that
these and other Latin American countries might be willing, in part because of their own
differences with the United States, to conduct certain transactions with Iran that might be
sanctionable. Venezuela appears willing to help Iran and, as noted earlier in this paper, its state oil
company has been sanctioned under the ISA. For the most part, however, Iran’s trade and other
business dealings with Latin America remain modest and likely to reduce the effect of sanctions
on Iran marginally at most.
Contrast With Previous Periods
The emerging consensus on Iran sanctions differs from early periods when there was far more
disagreement. Reflecting the traditional European preference for providing incentives rather than
enacting economic punishments, during 2002-2005, there were active negotiations between the
European Union and Iran on a “Trade and Cooperation Agreement” (TCA). Such an agreement
would have lowered the tariffs or increased quotas for Iranian exports to the EU countries.44
However, negotiations were discontinued after the election of Ahmadinejad in June 2005, at
which time Iran’s position on its nuclear program hardened. Similarly, there is insufficient
international support to grant Iran membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO) until
there is progress on the nuclear issue. Iran first attempted to apply to join the WTO in July 1996.
On 22 occasions after that, representatives of the Clinton and then the George W. Bush
Administration blocked Iran from applying (applications must be by consensus of the 148
members). As discussed above, as part of an effort to assist the EU-3 nuclear talks with Iran, at a
WTO meeting in May 2005, no opposition to Iran’s application was registered, and Iran formally
began accession talks.
Earlier, during the 1990s, EU countries maintained a policy of “critical dialogue” with Iran, and
the EU and Japan refused to join the 1995 U.S. trade and investment ban on Iran. The European
dialogue with Iran was suspended in April 1997 in response to the German terrorism trial
(“Mykonos trial”) that found high-level Iranian involvement in killing Iranian dissidents in
Germany, but resumed in May 1998 during Khatemi’s presidency. In the 1990s, European and
Japanese creditors—over U.S. objections—rescheduled about $16 billion in Iranian debt. These

44 During the active period of talks, which began in December 2002, there were working groups focused not only on the
TCA terms and proliferation issues but also on Iran’s human rights record, Iran’s efforts to derail the Middle East peace
process, Iranian-sponsored terrorism, counter-narcotics, refugees, migration issues, and the Iranian opposition PMOI.
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countries (governments and private creditors) rescheduled the debt bilaterally, in spite of Paris
Club rules that call for multilateral rescheduling. In July 2002, Iran tapped international capital
markets for the first time since the Islamic revolution, selling $500 million in bonds to European
banks. (A provision of H.R. 6296 would make sanctionable under ISA the purchase of Iranian
sovereign debt.)
World Bank Loans
The July 27, 2010, EU measures narrowed substantially the prior differences between the EU and
the United States over international lending to Iran. As noted above, the United States
representative to international financial institutions is required to vote against international
lending, but that vote, although weighted, is not sufficient to block international lending. In 1993
the United States voted its 16.5% share of the World Bank against loans to Iran of $460 million
for electricity, health, and irrigation projects, but the loans were approved. To block that lending,
the FY1994-FY1996 foreign aid appropriations (P.L. 103-87, P.L. 103-306, and P.L. 104-107) cut
the amount appropriated for the U.S. contribution to the bank by the amount of those loans. The
legislation contributed to a temporary halt in new bank lending to Iran. (In the 111th Congress, a
provision of H.R. 6296—Title VII—cut off U.S. contributions to the World Bank, International
Finance Corp., and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Corp. if the World Bank approves a
new Country Assistance Strategy for Iran or makes a loan to Iran.)
During 1999-2005, Iran’s moderating image had led the World Bank to consider new loans over
U.S. opposition. In May 2000, the United States’ allies outvoted the United States to approve
$232 million in loans for health and sewage projects. During April 2003-May 2005, a total of
$725 million in loans were approved for environmental management, housing reform, water and
sanitation projects, and land management projects, in addition to $400 million in loans for
earthquake relief.
Table 3. Comparison Between U.S., U.N., and EU and Allied Country Sanctions
Implementation by EU and
U.S. Sanctions
U.N. Sanctions
Some Allied Countries
General Observation: Most
Increasingly sweeping, but still
EU abides by al U.N. sanctions on
sweeping sanctions on Iran of
intended to primarily target Iran’s
Iran, and new sanctions imposed by
virtually any country in the world
nuclear and other WMD programs.
EU countries since July 27, 2010,
No mandatory sanctions on Iran’s
closely aligns EU sanctions with
energy sector.
those of the U.S.
Japan and South Korean sanctions
also increasingly extensive.
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Implementation by EU and
U.S. Sanctions
U.N. Sanctions
Some Allied Countries
Ban on U.S. Trade with and
U.N. sanctions do not ban civilian
No general EU ban on trade in
Investment in Iran:
trade with Iran or general civilian
civilian goods with Iran but, as a
sector investment in Iran. Nor do
consequence of the January 23,
Executive Order 12959 bans (with
U.N. sanctions mandate restrictions
2012, EU move to ban purchases of
limited exceptions) U.S. firms from
on provision of trade financing or
oil from Iran and freeze assets of its
exporting to Iran, importing from
financing guarantees by national
Central Bank, EU sanctions are now
Iran, or investing in Iran.
export credit guarantee agencies.
nearly as extensive as the United
There is an exemption for sales to
States. EU trade with Iran restricted
Iran of food and medical products,
by Jan. 23, 2012, EU freeze on
but no trade financing or financing
Tidewater port operator assets,
guarantees are permitted.
complicating offloading of many
goods at Iranian ports.
As discussed, Japan and South
Korea in the process of reducing oil
purchases from Iran, but not ending
them outright. Japan and South
Korea also have banned medium
and long term” trade financing and
financing guarantees.
Sanctions on Foreign Firms that
No U.N. equivalent exists. However,
EU sanctions prohibiting oil
Do Business With Iran’s Energy
preambular language in Resolution
purchases from Iran, prohibiting EU
Sector:
1929 “not[es] the potential
companies from financing energy
connection between Iran’s revenues
sector projects in Iran, and banning
The Iran Sanctions Act, P.L. 104-172
derived from its energy sector and
trade with Iran in petrochemicals
(as amended most recently by the
the funding of Iran’s proliferation-
and other energy sector equipment
Comprehensive Iran Sanctions,
sensitive nuclear activities.” This
now approximate those of the
Accountability, and Divestment Act
wording is interpreted by most
United States.
of 2010, P.L. 111-195)—and as
observers as providing U.N. support
enhanced by Executive Order
for countries who want to ban their
Japan and South Korean measures
13590—mandates specified sanctions companies from investing in Iran’s
ban new energy projects in Iran and
on foreign firms that invest threshold energy sector.
call for restraint on ongoing
amounts in Iran’s energy Sector or
projects. South Korean in
that sell certain threshold amounts of
December 2011 cautioned its firms
refined petroleum, or equipment or
not to sel energy or petrochemical
services for oil and gas development,
equipment to Iran.
refinery or petrochemical plant
expansion or maintenance, or
production or importation of
gasoline.
Ban on Foreign Assistance:
No U.N. equivalent
EU measures of July 27, 2010, ban
grants, aid, and concessional loans
U.S. foreign assistance to Iran—
to Iran. Also prohibit financing of
other than purely humanitarian aid—
enterprises involved in Iran’s energy
is banned under §620A of the
sector.
Foreign Assistance Act. That section
bans U.S. assistance to countries on
Japan and South Korea measures do
the U.S. list of “state sponsors of
not specifically ban aid or lending to
terrorism.” Iran has been on this
Iran, but no such lending by these
“terrorism list” since January 1984.
countries is under way.
Iran is also routinely denied direct
U.S. foreign aid under the annual
foreign operations appropriations
acts (most recently in §7007 of
division H of P.L. 111-8).
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Implementation by EU and
U.S. Sanctions
U.N. Sanctions
Some Allied Countries
Ban on Arms Exports to Iran:
Resolution 1929 (operative paragraph EU sanctions include a
8) bans all U.N. member states from
comprehensive ban on sale to Iran
Because Iran is on the “terrorism
selling or supplying to Iran major
of all types of military equipment,
list,” it is ineligible for U.S. arms
weapons systems, including tanks,
not just major combat systems.
exports pursuant to §40 of the Arms
armored vehicles, combat aircraft,
Export Control Act (AECA, P.L. 95-
warships, and most missile systems,
No similar Japan and South Korean
92). The International Trafficking in
or related spare parts or advisory
measures announced, but neither
Arms Regulations (ITAR, 22 CFR
services for such weapons systems.
has exported arms to Iran.
Part 126.1) also cite the President’s
authority to control arms exports,
and to comply with U.N. Security
Council Resolutions as a justification
to ban arms exports and imports.
Restriction on Exports to Iran of The U.N. Resolutions on Iran,
EU bans the sales of dual use items
“Dual Use Items”:
cumulatively, ban the export of
to Iran, in line with U.N.
almost all dual-use items to Iran.
resolutions.
Primarily under §6(j) of the Export
Administration Act (P.L. 96-72) and
Japan announced ful adherence to
§38 of the Arms Export Control Act,
strict export control regimes when
there is a denial of license
evaluating sales to Iran. South Korea
applications to sell Iran goods that
has adopted similar policies.
could have military applications.
Sanctions Against International
Resolution 1747 (oper. paragraph 7)
The July 27, 2010, measures
Lending to Iran:
requests, but does not mandate, that
prohibit EU members from
countries and international financial
providing grants, aid, and
Under §1621 of the International
institutions refrain from making
concessional loans to Iran, including
Financial Institutions Act (P.L. 95-
grants or loans to Iran, except for
through international financial
118), U.S. representatives to
development and humanitarian
institutions.
international financial institutions,
purposes.
such as the World Bank, are
No specific similar Japan or South
required to vote against loans to Iran
Korea measures announced.
by those institutions.
Sanctions Against Foreign Firms Resolution 1737 (oper. paragraph 12) The EU measures imposed July 27,
that Sell Weapons of Mass
imposes a worldwide freeze on the
2010, commit the EU to freezing
Destruction-Related Technology assets and property of Iranian entities the assets of entities named in the
to Iran:
named in an Annex to the
U.N. resolutions, as well as
Resolution. Each subsequent
numerous other named Iranian
Several laws and regulations,
Resolution has expanded the list of
entities.
including the Iran-Syria North Korea
Iranian entities subject to these
Nonproliferation Act (P.L. 106-178),
sanctions.
Japan and South Korea froze assets
the Iran-Iraq Arms Nonproliferation
of U.N.-sanctioned entities.
Act (P.L. 102-484) and Executive
Order 13382 provide for sanctions

against entities, Iranian or otherwise,
that are determined to be involved in
or supplying Iran’s WMD programs
(asset freezing, ban on transaction
with the entity).
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Implementation by EU and
U.S. Sanctions
U.N. Sanctions
Some Allied Countries
Ban on Transactions With
No direct equivalent, but Resolution
No direct equivalent, but many of
Terrorism Supporting Entities:
1747 (oper. paragraph 5) bans Iran
the Iranian entities named as
from exporting any arms—a
blocked by the EU, Japan, and South
Executive Order 13224 bans
provision widely interpreted as trying
Korea overlap or complement
transactions with entities determined to reduce Iran’s material support to
Iranian entities named as terrorism
by the Administration to be
groups such as Lebanese Hizbol ah,
supporting by the United States.
supporting international terrorism.
Hamas, Shiite militias in Iraq, and
Numerous entities, including some of insurgents in Afghanistan.
Iranian origin, have been so
designated.
Travel Ban on Named Iranians:
Resolution 1803 imposed a binding
The EU sanctions announced July
ban on international travel by several
27, 2010, contains an Annex of
The Comprehensive Iran Sanctions,
Iranians named in an Annex to the
named Iranians subject to a ban on
Accountability, and Divestment Act
Resolution. Resolution 1929
travel to the EU countries. An
of 2010 (P.L. 111-195) provides for a
extended that ban to additional
additional 60+ Iranians involved in
prohibition on travel to the U.S.,
Iranians, and forty Iranians are now
human rights abuses were subjected
blocking of U.S.-based property, and
subject to the ban. However, the
to EU sanctions since.
ban on transactions with Iranians
Iranians subject to the travel ban are
determined to be involved in serious
so subjected because of their
Japan and South Korea have
human rights abuses against Iranians
involvement in Iran’s WMD
announced bans on named Iranians.
since the June 12, 2009, presidential
programs, not because of
election there.
involvement in human rights abuses.
Restrictions on Iranian Shipping: Resolution 1803 and 1929 authorize
The EU measures announced July
countries to inspect cargoes carried
27, 2010, bans Iran Air Cargo from
Under Executive Order 13382, the
by Iran Air and Islamic Republic of
access to EU airports. The
U.S. Treasury Department has
Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL)—or any
measures also freeze the EU-based
named Islamic Republic of Iran
ships in national or international
assets of IRISL and its affiliates.
Shipping Lines and several affiliated
waters—if there is an indication that
Insurance and re-insurance for
entities as entities whose U.S.-based
the shipments include goods whose
Iranian firms is banned.
property is to be frozen.
export to Iran is banned.
Japan and South Korean measures
took similar actions against IRISL
and Iran Air.
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Implementation by EU and
U.S. Sanctions
U.N. Sanctions
Some Allied Countries
Banking Sanctions:
No direct equivalent
The EU freeze on Iran Central Bank
assets announced January 23, 2012,
During 2006-2011, several Iranian
However, two Iranian banks are
closely align EU sanctions on this
banks have been named as
named as sanctioned entities under
issue with those of the United
proliferation or terrorism supporting
the U.N. Security Council
States. In July 2012, the EU
entities under Executive Orders
resolutions.
prohibited the opening in EU
13382 and 13224, respectively (see
countries of any new branches or
list at end of paper).
offices of Iranian banks. The
CISADA prohibits banking
measures also prohibit EU banks
relationships with U.S. banks for any
from offices or accounts in Iran. In
foreign bank that conducts
addition, the transfer of funds
transactions with Iran’s
exceeding 40,000 Euros (about
Revolutionary Guard or with Iranian
$50,000) between and Iranian bank
entities sanctioned under the various
and an EU bank require prior
U.N. resolutions.
authorization by EU regulators.
November 21, 2011: Treasury
November 21, 2011: Britain and
Department names Iranian financial
Canada bar their banks from any
sector as a jurisdiction of primary
transactions with Iran Central Bank.
money laundering concern.
March 2012: Brussels-based SWIFT
December 31, 2011: President
says expelled sanctioned Iranian
Obama signs Defense Authorization
banks from the electronic payment
(P.L. 112-81) preventing U.S.
transfer system.
accounts with foreign banks that
Japan and South Korea measures
process transactions with Iran’s
similar to the 2010 EU sanctions,
Central Bank.
with South Korea adhering to the
same 40,000 Euro authorization
requirement. Japan and S. Korea
froze the assets of 15 Iranian banks;
South Korea targeted Bank Mel at
for freeze.
No direct equivalent, although, as
Resolution 1929 (oper. paragraph 7)
EU measures on July 27, 2010,
discussed above, U.S. proliferations
prohibits Iran from acquiring an
require adherence to this provision
laws provide for sanctions against
interest in any country involving
of Resolution 1929.
foreign entities that help Iran with its
uranium mining, production, or use
nuclear and ballistic missile programs. of nuclear materials, or technology
related to nuclear-capable ballistic
missiles.
Paragraph 9 of Resolution 1929
prohibits Iran from undertaking “any
activity” related to ballistic missiles
capable of delivering a nuclear
weapon.

Effectiveness of Sanctions on Iran
Assessing the effectiveness of U.S. and international sanctions depends upon which goals are
being examined. The following sections examine the effectiveness of sanctions according to a
variety of criteria.
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Effect on Nuclear Negotiations
There is a consensus that U.S. and U.N. sanctions have not, to date, accomplished their core
strategic objective of compelling Iran to agree to verifiably limit Iran’s nuclear development to
purely peaceful purposes. This assessment was included in testimony by the Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper before the Senate Intelligence Committee on January 31, 2012 and
before the Senate Armed Services Committee on February 16, 2012.
U.S. officials, including President Obama in March 2012, have said that the effects of sanctions
on the Iranian economy are sufficiently strong that Iranian leaders might yet reassess their
negotiating stance. He has used this assertion to argue that more time should be left for diplomacy
and for sanctions to pressure the Iranian leadership before military action against Iran’s nuclear
facilities be considered. In February 2012, Iran formally responded to an EU invitation for new
talks, and on March 6, 2012, the P5+1 accepted another round of talks. The date of April 13, 2012
reportedly has been agreed, but not the venue. Others see Iran as using talks to play for time to
further develop its nuclear program.
Counter-Proliferation Effects
A related issue is whether the cumulative sanctions have directly set back Iran’s nuclear efforts by
making it difficult for Iran to import needed materials or skills. In a speech on November 22,
2011, National Security Adviser Tom Donilon said:
The effect of these sanctions has been clear. Coupled with mistakes and difficulties in Iran,
they have slowed Iran’s nuclear efforts. Sanctions and export control efforts have made it
more difficult and costly for Iran to acquire key materials and equipment for its enrichment
program, including items that Iran cannot produce itself.45
Others, however, say that there is not clear evidence that sanctions are slowing Iran’s program.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reports have consistently said that Iran’s stockpile
of low-enriched uranium continues to expand, as do its holdings of 20% enriched uranium. Iran is
now enriching uranium to 20% at its hardened facility at Fordow, near Qom, according to the
February 24, 2012 IAEA report.46
General Political Effects
The international community has hoped that international sanctions might provoke a leadership
debate in Iran and strengthen those in Iran who might argue that Iran’s nuclear program is
carrying too high a cost. There are growing indications of splits in the Iranian leadership—
particularly between President Ahmadinejad and the Supreme Leader—to the point at which there
has been open discussion in Iran’s parliament since June 2011 of impeaching Ahmadinejad.
Factions loyal to Ahmadinejad and to the Supreme Leader, although all are hardline, competed
against each other in March 2, 2012, Majles elections and returns suggest that supporters of the
Supreme Leader won about 75% of the 290 seats. However, these splits do not appear to be
driven primarily by differences over how to react to international sanctions.

45 Speech by National Security Adviser Tom Donilon at the Brookings Institution. November 22, 2011.
46 http://www.isisnucleariran.org/assets/pdf/IAEA_Iran_Report_24February2012.pdf
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One U.S. intelligence official told journalists in January 2012 that the Administration believes
sanctions could also be used to undermine the Iranian regime outright, although that is not the
widely stated goal of U.S. and international sanctions.47 Many Iranians appear to blame the
regime for bringing on sanctions by refusing to compromise on the nuclear program, but many
blame the United States and its partners for imposing sanctions that hurt the population perhaps
more than they do the regime. The regime claimed a 65% turnout in the March 2, 2012 Majles
(parliament) elections, and asserted the high turnout was an indication Iranians are rallying to the
regime during a time of international threat. Iran’s population, whether opposed to or supportive
of the government now, have lived through deprivation during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War. The
opposition Green movement remained largely absent from the streets in 2011, as it was in 2010. It
returned to the streets briefly on February 14, 2012.
The regime also closely watches the attitudes and opinions of Iran’s influential merchant class
(“bazaaris”). The bazaaris’ shift against the former Shah of Iran was key to his downfall. The
bazaaris have tended to support the current regime as a provider of economic stability, but they
could shift if the economy declines even more sharply. There are anecdotal indications of bazaari
complaints about the regime’s inability to parry ever-increasing international sanctions, but no
recent organized opposition has, to date, emanated from this constituency.
Labor is also a key interest group. Labor strikes, particularly in the oil sector, were also key to the
1979 downfall of the Shah’s rule. There were anecdotal reports of labor unrest in 2011, including
strikes for overdue pay, but these strikes did not appear to have overtly political objectives.
Economic Effects
The accumulation of international, bilateral, and multilateral sanctions is beginning to take a
dramatic toll on Iran’s economy. Iranian officials now openly acknowledge that sanctions are
hurting Iran’s economy: President Ahmadinejad told the Majles on November 1, 2011, that
international sanctions are causing serious problems for Iran’s banking sector. Ahmadinejad
acknowledged to the Majles in late December 2011 that Iran is shut out of the international
banking system. Among other specifics:
• The EU oil embargo and the restrictions on transactions with Iran’s Central Bank
have had significant adverse effects on Iran, even though the oil embargo will not
be fully implemented until July 1, 2012. These sanctions have the potential to
cripple the country economically. Oil sales account for 50% to 70% of
government revenue. Based on initial estimates from the International Energy
Agency and other observers, as of late March 2012, Iran has already lost about
14% of its oil sales by volume (over 300,000 barrels per day in lost sales) as
customers in the EU and Japan, in particular, cut purchases.48 The IEA cites
industry estimates that it could ultimately lose 1 million barrels per day in sales.49
That is about 40% of its 2.5 million barrels per day (mbd). Iran has begun to store
some of the unsold oil on tankers in the Persian Gulf, and other Iranian tankers
are reported to be unable to offload their oil because of difficulty obtaining

47 Karen DeYoung and Scott Wilson. “Public Ire Is One Goal of Sanctions Against Iran, U.S. Official Says.”
Washington Post, January 11, 2012.
48 Alex Lawler. “Iran Oil Exports Fall As Sanctions Take Toll.” Reuters, March 23, 2012.
49 Christopher Johnson. “Iran Sanctions Already Hitting Oil Trade Flows: IEA.” Reuters, February 10, 2012.
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insurance. Further revenue losses are possible if remaining customers, such as
China and India, force Iran to discount each barrel. The sales shortfalls—unless
oil prices escalate more dramatically—will likely hamper Iran’s ability to fully
fund its social spending obligations and defense and WMD programs.
• Iran appears to be so concerned about a loss of sales due to customer purchase
reductions and payments difficulties that, on February 29, 2012, its Central Bank
governor said Iran is willing to accept payment for oil in gold as well as the
national currencies of customer countries. Several weeks later, Iran announced it
is willing to accept payment in local (non-convertible) currencies. As noted
above, many of its oil transactions reportedly are now conducted on a barter
basis, with Iran providing oil in exchange for wheat and consumer imports. On
the other hand, some Iranian importers are circumventing payments difficulties
by using Europe and Asia-based traders who can finance their own operations.50
• These payments difficulties—and Iran’s acceptance of barter arrangements and
payment mechanisms other than hard currency—have left Iran’s Central Bank
short of hard currency and caused a reduction in the value of Iran’s currency, the
rial. The effects of existing sanctions, and the worry about further sanctions, have
reportedly driven the value of the rial down 40% since early December 2011, to a
level of about 20,000 to the dollar as of late March 2012. The government has
been unable to stanch the decline with measures such as raising official interest
rates. On the other hand, some believe that the regime is not affected by the
currency fall because it still has access to hard currency and can use it to buy
rials—or services denominated in rials—cheaply.
• These difficulties—shipping, currency devaluation, and others—have driven up
the costs to the Iranian trading community by an estimated 40%.51 Overall
inflation appears to be increasing, causing public dissatisfaction. Some merchants
have reportedly gone out of business in late 2011 and early 2012 because of the
economic conditions, and have had to lay off workers. Other press reports say
that many Iranians are stockpiling staple goods such as rice and cooking oil, and
buying as much hard currency as possible, anticipating further economic
deterioration.
• Still, Iran might be able to cope with a loss of oil sales and other difficulties.
World oil prices have increased since the beginning of 2012—and some of the
price movements are due to the international tensions with Iran. The increase in
oil prices—above $105 per barrel in March 2012—mitigates some of the effects
of international sanctions. Iran is estimated to have earned about $500 billion in
total revenue from oil during 2006-2011.
• Beyond the issue of the cost of imported goods aside, the Treasury Department’s
designations of affiliates and ships belong to Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping
Lines (IRISL) reportedly are harming Iran’s ability to ship goods at all, and has
further raised the prices of goods to Iranian import-export dealers. Some ships
have been impounded by various countries for nonpayment of debts due on them.
A substantial portion of the Iranian economy depends on import-export activity,

50 Valerie Parent and Michael Hogan. “Iran Paying for Grain With Gold, Oil: Traders” Reuters, February 9, 2012.
51 “Iran’s Gateway in Dubai Highlights Sanctions Bite.” Associated Press, February 1, 2011.
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so the damage to the merchant community from international sanctions has been
considerable. Further effects are likely in light of the EU’s freeze on the assets of
Tidewater Middle East Company in January 2012; the firm operates many of
Iran’s ports and ports in neighboring countries that service ships headed to Iran.
Foreign Companies Exiting the Iran Market
The sanctions have caused Iran to be viewed by international firms as “radioactive,” causing
many international firms to exit the Iranian market even if doing so is not required by any
sanction. Neither the U.S. ban on trade and investment with Iran, nor U.N. sanctions, nor
European Union sanctions on Iran, ban trade with Iran in all civilian goods. Many experts believe
that, over time, the efficiency and output of Iran’s economy will decline as foreign expertise
departs and Iran attracts alternative investment from or imports goods from less capable foreign
companies. Examples of major non-U.S. companies discontinuing business with Iran include the
following:
• ABB of Switzerland said in January 2010 it would cease doing business with
Iran.
• Siemens of Germany was active in the Iran telecommunications infrastructure
market, but announced in February 2010 that it would cease pursuing business in
Iran. Finemeccanica, a defense and transportation conglomerate of Italy, followed
suit, as did Thyssen-Krupp, a German steelmaker.
• Germany’s Daimler (Mercedes-Benz maker) said in April 2010 it would freeze
planned exports to Iran of cars and trucks.
• In August-September 2010, Japan and South Korea announced that their
automakers Toyota, Hyundai, and Kia Motors would cease selling automobiles to
Iran.
• Attorneys for BNP Paribas of France told the author in July 2011 that, as of 2007,
the firm was pursuing no new business in Iran, although it was fulfilling existing
obligations in that market.
• On June 30, 2011, according to press reports, the Danish shipping giant Maersk
told Iran that it would no longer operate out of Iran’s three largest ports. The
firm’s decision reportedly was based on the U.S. announcement on June 23,
2011, that it was sanctioning the operator of those ports, Tidewater Middle East
Co., as a proliferation entity under Executive Order 13382. The pullout of
Maersk will likely further raise shipping costs.
• The State Department reported on September 30, 2010, that Hong Kong company
NYK Line Ltd. had ended shipping business with Iran (on any goods).
• Persuading oil services firms to exit Iran was the intent of Executive Order 13590
of November 21, 2011, which makes such activity sanctionable. Well before the
Order was issued, one large oil services firm Schlumberger, which in
incorporated in the Netherlands Antilles, said it will wind down its business with
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Iran. However, press reports citing company documents say all contracts with
Iran might not be terminated until at least 2013.52
Foreign Firms Reportedly Remaining in the Iran Market
Some firms continue to run the financial risk of doing business with Iran. Some of the well-
known firms that continue to do so include Alcatel-Lucent of France; Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi
UFJ; Bosch of Germany; Canon of Japan; Fiat SPA of Italy; Ericsson of Sweden; ING Group of
the Netherlands; Mercedes of Germany; Renault of France; Samsung of South Korea; Sony of
Japan; Volkswagen of Germany; Volvo of Sweden; and numerous others. Some of the foreign
firms that trade with Iran, such as Mitsui and Co. of Japan, Alstom of France, and Schneider
Electric of France, are discussed in the March 7, 2010, New York Times article on foreign firms
that do business with Iran and also receive U.S. contracts or financing. The Times article does not
claim that these firms have violated any U.S. sanctions laws.
Other questions have arisen over how U.S. sanctions might apply to business with foreign firms
that Iran might acquire a full or partial interest in. Such firms include Daewoo Electronics of
South Korea, where an Iranian firm—Entekhab Industrial Corp.—is a leading bidder to take over
that firm. Another example is Adabank of Turkey, which reportedly might be sold to Iran.
Subsidy Phase-Out Issue
A larger issue, which may have been affected by sanctions, but perhaps positively for Iran, is a
long-delayed plan to phase out state subsidies on staple goods such staples as gasoline and some
foods over the next five years. International sanctions might have helped Ahmadinejad convince
the Majles (parliament) that passing the subsidy reduction plan was urgent if Iran was to parry the
effects of burgeoning international sanctions. After several delays, the program started on
December 19, 2010, with a reduction in subsidies of gasoline and bread. The price of traditional
bread immediately escalated to 40 cents, from 15 cents, when the program began. Gasoline prices
now run on a tiered system in which a small increment is available at the subsidized price of
about 1.60 per gallon, but amounts above that threshold are available only at a price of about
$2.60 per gallon, close to the world price. The lower and lower middle class is being
compensated with direct cash payments of about $40 per month.53
The IMF report of August 2011, discussed above, said that the phase-out removed about $60
billion in costs from Iran’s budget. However, some Iranian economists say that 63 million
Iranians qualify for the compensatory cash payments and that this costs the government nearly all
of the savings incurred from the subsidy phase-out. Still, political benefits are accruing to the
regime in the rural areas, where families are large and the subsidy offset brings in substantial
monthly income.
Effect on the Development of the Energy Sector
As noted throughout, the U.S. objective has been to focus sanctions against Iran’s energy sector,
considered the engine of Iran’s economy currently and in the future. U.S. officials in 2011 said

52 Stockman, Farah. “Oil Firm Says It Will Withdraw From Iran.” Boston Globe, November 12, 2010.
53 Erdbink, Thomas. “Leaving Iran’s Middle Class Behind.” Washington Post, November 7, 2010.
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that Iran has lost $60 billion in investment as numerous major firms have either announced
pullouts from some of their Iran projects, declined to make further investments, or resold their
investments to other companies. It is therefore highly unlikely that Iran will attract the $145
billion in new investment by 2018 that Iran’s deputy Oil Minister said in November 2008 that
Iran needs. Similar estimates come from independent Iranian energy experts, who say that, as of
October 2011, the sector needs $130 billion in investment from 2011 until 2020.54 Observers at
key energy fields in Iran say there is little evidence of foreign investment activity and little new
development activity sighted, including at the large South Pars gas field that Iran has focused on
for at least 10 years.
Still, according to the Energy Information Administration, Iran’s oil production has risen slightly
(about 4 million barrels per day) and net exports have not fallen significantly, if at all, over the
past five years. 55 It might take several years for the lack of investment to show up in declining
Iranian oil production. Production is projected to fall to about 3.3 mbd by 2015.56 That estimate is
somewhat less than the 25% decline over the next five years (by 2016) that the GAO August 3,
2011, report, quoting Oil and Gas Journal, estimates is possible.
Others maintain that Iran’s gas sector can compensate for declining oil exports, although Iran has
used its gas development primarily to reinject into its oil fields rather than to export. Iran exports
about 3.6 trillion cubic feet of gas, primarily to Turkey, but also to Armenia. Some Members of
Congress believe that ISA would have been even more effective in injuring Iran’s energy sector if
successive administrations had imposed ISA sanctions more aggressively.
A Government Accountability Office (GAO) report of August 3, 2011, contains tables that discuss
those firms that have discontinued commercial activity in Iran’s energy sector, as well as those
still operating and investing.57 Table 3 shows international firms that have invested or remain
invested in Iran’s energy sector. Some of them have not been determined to have violated ISA and
may be under investigation by the State Department. As discussed above, some firms have been
sanctioned, and others have avoided sanctions either through Administration waivers or
invocation of the “special rule.”
The EU sanctions apparently have also derailed a BP-NIOC joint venture in the Rhum gas field,
200 miles off the coast of Scotland. BP announced in November 2010 that it would stop
production there to ensure compliance with the EU sanctions. In addition, partners in the Trans-
Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) said in September 2010 that the pipeline would not be used to transport
Iranian gas to Europe.
Concerns About “Backfill”
There has been a concern that some of the investment void might be “backfilled,” at least partly,
by Asian firms such as those from China, Malaysia, Vietnam, and countries in Eastern Europe.
However, many such deals are said to be in preliminary stages, and clear examples of

54 Khajehpour presentation at CSIS. Op. cit.
55 http://www.eia.gov/cabs/iran/Full.html.
56 http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704569204575328851816763476.html.
57 GAO. GAO-11-855R. Firms Reported in Open Sources As Having Commercial Activity in Iran’s Oil, Gas, and
Petrochemical Sectors. August 3, 2011.
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“backfilling” are few, to date. Most of the companies that might backfill abandoned projects are
perceived as not being as technically capable as those that have withdrawn from Iran.
To try to mitigate the trend in Iran has been that the “backfill” is being conducted by domestic
companies, particularly those controlled or linked to the Revolutionary Guard (IRGC). Deals with
Polish and Russian firms fell apart in late 2011, and their projects reportedly were taken over by
domestic Iranian firms. Still, backfill by Iranian firms has potential pitfalls because foreign firms
are reluctant to partner with IRGC firms, which are increasingly targeted by international
sanctions. In July 2010, after the enactment of Resolution 1929 and CISADA, the Revolutionary
Guard’s main construction affiliate, Khatem ol-Anbiya, announced it had withdrawn from
developing Phases 15 and 16 of South Pars—a project worth $2 billion.58 Khatem ol-Anbiya took
over that project in 2006 when Norway’s Kvaerner pulled out of it.
Table 4. Post-1999 Major Investments/Major Development Projects
in Iran’s Energy Sector
Company(ies)/Status
Date Field/Project
(If Known)
Value
Output/Goal
Feb.
Doroud (oil)
Total (France)/ENI
$1 billion
205,000 bpd
1999
(Italy)
(Energy Information Agency, Department
of Energy, August 2006.)
Total and ENI exempted from sanctions
on September 30 because of pledge to
exit Iran market
April
Balal (oil)
Total/ Bow Valley
$300 million
40,000 bpd
1999
(Canada)/ENI
(“Balal Field Development in Iran
Completed,” World Market Research
Centre, May 17, 2004.)
Nov.
Soroush and Nowruz (oil)
Royal Dutch Shell
$800 million
190,000 bpd
1999
(Netherlands)/Japex
(“News in Brief: Iran.” Middle East
(Japan)
Economic Digest, (MEED) January 24,
2003.)
Royal Dutch exempted from sanctions on
9/30 because of pledge to exit Iran
market
April
Norsk Hydro and
$105 million
65,000
2000
Anaran bloc (oil)
Statoil (Norway) and
Gazprom and Lukoil
(MEED Special Report, December 16,
(Russia) No production
2005, pp. 48-50.)
to date; Statoil and
Norsk have left project.
July
Phase 4 and 5, South Pars (gas)
ENI
$1.9 billion
2 billion cu.
2000
ft./day (cfd)
(Petroleum Economist, December 1, 2004.)
Gas onstream as of
Dec. 2004
ENI exempted 9/30 based on pledge to
exit Iran market

58 “Iran Revolutionary Guards Pull Out of Gas Deal Over Sanctions.” Platts, July 19, 2010.
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Company(ies)/Status
Date Field/Project
(If Known)
Value
Output/Goal
March
Caspian Sea oil exploration
GVA Consultants
$225 million
NA
2001
construction of submersible drilling rig
(Sweden)
for Iranian partner
(IPR Strategic Business Information
Database, March 11, 2001.)
June
Darkhovin (oil)
ENI
$1 billion
100,000 bpd
2001
(“Darkhovin Production Doubles.” Gulf
Field in production
Daily News, May 1, 2008.) ENI told CRS
in April 2010 it would close out all Iran
operations by 2013.
ENI exempted from sanctions on 9/30, as
discussed above
May
Sheer Energy
$80 million
25,000 bpd
2002
Masjid-e-Soleyman (oil)
(Canada)/China
National Petroleum
(“CNPC Gains Upstream Foothold.”
Company (CNPC).
MEED, September 3, 2004.)
Local partner is
Naftgaran Engineering
Sept.
LG Engineering and
$1.6 billion
2 billion cfd
2002
Phase 9 + 10, South Pars (gas)
Construction Corp.
(now known as GS
(“OIEC Surpasses South Korean
Engineering and
Company in South Pars.” IPR Strategic
Construction Corp.,
Business Information Database,
South Korea)
November 15, 2004.)
On stream as of early
2009
October
Phase 6, 7, 8, South Pars (gas)
Statoil (Norway)
$750 million
3 billion cfd
2002
(Source: Statoil, May 2011)

Field began producing late 2008;
operational control handed to NIOC in
2009. Statoil exempted from sanctions on
9/30/2010 because Statoil pledged to exit
Iran market.
January
Azadegan (oil)
Inpex (Japan) 10%
$200 million
260,000 bpd
2004
stake. CNPC agreed to
(Inpex stake);
(“Japan Mul s Azadegan Options.” APS
develop “north
China $1.76
Review Oil Market Trends, November
Azadegan” in Jan. 2009
billion
27, 2006.)
October 15, 2010: Inpex announced it
would exit the project by selling its stake;
“special rule” exempting it from ISA
investigation invoked November 17,
2010.
August
Tusan Block
Petrobras (Brazil)
$178 million
No
2004
production
Oil found in block in Feb. 2009, but not in
commercial quantity, according to the
firm. (“Iran-Petrobras Operations.” APS
Review Gas Market Trends, April 6,
2009; “Brazil’s Petrobras Sees Few
Prospects for Iran Oil,”
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Iran Sanctions

Company(ies)/Status
Date Field/Project
(If Known)
Value
Output/Goal
(http://www.reuters.com/article/
idUSN0317110720090703.)
October
Yadavaran (oil)
Sinopec (China), deal
$2 billion
300,000 bpd
2004
finalized Dec. 9, 2007
Formal start of development of the field
still delayed as of September 2011
(“China Curbs Iran Energy Work,”
Reuters, September 2, 2011)
2005
Saveh bloc (oil)
PTT (Thailand)
?
?
GAO report, cited below
June
Garmsar bloc (oil)
Sinopec (China)
$20 million
?
2006
Deal finalized in June 2009
(“China’s Sinopec signs a deal to develop
oil block in Iran—report,” Forbes, 20
June 2009, http://www.forbes.com/feeds/
afx/2006/06/20/afx2829188.html.)
July
Arak Refinery expansion
Sinopec (China); JGC
$959 million
Expansion to
2006
(Japan). Work may have (major initial
produce
(GAO reports; Fimco FZE Machinery
been taken over or
expansion;
250,000 bpd
website; http://www.fimco.org/index.php?
continued by Hyundai
extent of
option=com_content&task=view&id=70&
Heavy Industries (S.
Hyundai work
Itemid=78.)
Korea)
unknown)
Sept.
Khorramabad block (oil)
Norsk Hydro and
$49 million
?
2006
Statoil (Norway).
Seismic data gathered, but no production
is planned. (Statoil factsheet, May 2011)
Dec.
North Pars Gas Field (offshore gas).
China National
$16 billion
3.6 billion cfd
2006
Includes gas purchases
Offshore Oil Co.
Work crews reportedly pulled from the
project in early-mid 2011. (“China Curbs
Iran Energy Work” Reuters, September 2,
2011)
Feb.
LNG Tanks at Tombak Port
Daelim (S. Korea)
$320 million
200,000 ton
2007
capacity
Contract to build three LNG tanks at
Tombak, 30 miles north of Assaluyeh
Port.
(May not constitute “investment” as
defined in pre-2010 version of ISA,
because that definition did not specify
LNG as “petroleum resource” of Iran.)
“Central Bank Approves $900 Million for
Iran LNG Project.” Tehran Times, June
13, 2009.
Feb.
Phase 13, 14—South Pars (gas)
Royal Dutch Shell,
$4.3 billion
?
2007
Repsol (Spain)
Deadline to finalize as May 20, 2009,
apparently not met; firms submitted revised
proposals to Iran in June 2009.
(http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?
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Company(ies)/Status
Date Field/Project
(If Known)
Value
Output/Goal
a_id=77040&hmpn=1.)
State Department said on September 30,
2010, that Royal Dutch Shel and Repsol
have ended negotiations with Iran and will
not pursue this project any further
March
Esfahan refinery upgrade
Daelim (S. Korea)

NA
2007
(“Daelim, Others to Upgrade Iran’s
Esfahan Refinery.” Chemical News and
Intelligence
, March 19, 2007.)
July
Phase 22, 23, 24—South Pars (gas)
Turkish Petroleum
$12. billion
2 billion cfd
2007
Company (TPAO)
Pipeline to transport Iranian gas to
Turkey, and on to Europe and building
three power plants in Iran. Contract not
finalized to date.
Dec.
Golshan and Ferdows onshore and
SKS Ventures,
$16 billion
3.4 billion cfd
2007
offshore gas fields and LNG plant
Petrofield Subsidiary
(Malaysia)
contract modified but reaffirmed
December 2008
(GAO report; Oil Daily, January 14,
2008.)
2007
Jofeir Field (oil)
Belarusneft (Belarus)
$500 million
40,000 bpd
(unspec.)
under contract to
GAO report cited below. Belarusneft, a
Naftiran.
subsidiary of Belneftekhim, sanctioned
under ISA on March 29, 2011. Naftiran
No production to date
sanctioned on September 29, 2010, for
this and other activities.
2008
Dayyer Bloc (Persian Gulf, offshore,
Edison (Italy)
$44 million
?
oil)
GAO report cited below
Feb.
Lavan field (offshore natural gas)
PGNiG (Polish Oil and
$2 billion

2008
Gas Company, Poland)
GAO report cited below invested.
PGNiG invested, but delays caused Iran

to void PGNiG contract in December
2011. Project to be implemented by
Iranian firms. (Fars News, December 20,
2011)
March
Danan Field (on-shore oil)
Petro Vietnam
? ?
2008
Exploration and
“PVEP Wins Bid to Develop Danan
Production Co.
Field.” Iran Press TV, March 11, 2008
(Vietnam)
April
Iran’s Kish gas field
Oman (co-financing of
$7 billion
1 billion cfd
2008
project)
Includes pipeline from Iran to Oman
(http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=
112062&sectionid=351020103.)
April
Moghan 2 (onshore oil and gas,
INA (Croatia)
$40-$140
?
2008
Ardebil province)
million
(dispute over
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Iran Sanctions

Company(ies)/Status
Date Field/Project
(If Known)
Value
Output/Goal
GAO report cited below
size)
-
Kermanshah petrochemical plant
Uhde (Germany)

300,000
(new construction)
metric tons/yr
GAO report cited below
January
“North Azadegan”
CNPC (China)
$1.75 billion
75,000 bpd
2009
(Chinadaily.com. “CNPC to Develop
Azadegan Oilfield,”
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/bizchina/
2009-01/16/content_7403699.htm.)
January
Bushehr Polymer Plants
Sasol (South Africa)
?
Capacity is 1
2009
million tons
Production of polyethelene at two
per year.
polymer plants in Bushehr Province
Products are
exported
(GAO August 2011 report)
from Iran.
March
Phase 12 South Pars (gas)—part 1. Incl.
Taken over by Indian
$8 billion
20 million
2009
LNG terminal construction and Farzad-B
firms (ONGC, Oil India from Indian
tonnes of
natural gas bloc. Project stalled due to
Ltd., Hinduja, Petronet
firms/$1.5
LNG annually
sanctions; ONGC and Hinduja have had
in 2007). Sonanagol
billion
by 2012
difficulty financing the project. Sonangol
(Angola) has 20% stake, Sonangol/$780
reportedly exited project in February 2012
and PDVSA (Venezuela) million
due to inability to finance its stake.
involved as well.
PDVSA
“Noose Tightens Around Iran Oil.”
Washington Post, March 6, 2012.
August
Abadan refinery
Sinopec
up to $6

2009
billion if new
Upgrade and expansion; building a new
refinery is
refinery at Hormuz on the Persian Gulf
built
coast
October
South Pars Gas Field—Phases 6-8,
G and S Engineering
$1.4 billion

2009
Gas Sweetening Plant
and Construction
(South Korea)
CRS conversation with Embassy of S.
Korea in Washington, D.C, July 2010
Contract signed but then abrogated by S.
Korean firm
Nov.
South Pars: Phase 12—Part 2 and
Daelim (S. Korea)—
$4 billion ($2

2009
Part 3
Part 2; Tecnimont
bn each part)
(Italy)—Part 3
(“Italy, South Korea To Develop South
Pars Phase 12.” Press TV (Iran),
November 3, 2009,
http://www.presstv.com/pop/Print/?id=
110308.)
Feb.
South Pars: Phase 11
CNPC (China)
$4.7 billion

2010
Drilling was to begin in March 2010, but
drilling still delayed as of September 2011.
(“China Curbs Iran Energy Work,”
Reuters, September 2, 2011)
2011
Azar Gas Field
Gazprom (Russia)


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Company(ies)/Status
Date Field/Project
(If Known)
Value
Output/Goal
Gazprom contract voided in late 2011 by
Iran due to Gazprom’s unspecified failure
to fulfill its commitments.
Dec.
Zagheh Oil Field
Tatneft (Russia)
$1 billion
55,000 barrels
2011
per day within
Preliminary deal signed December 18, 2011
five years
(Associated Press, December 18, 2011)
Sources: As noted in table, as wel as CRS conversations with officials of the State Department Bureau of
Economics, and officials of embassies of the parent government of some of the listed companies (2005-2009).
Some information comes: March 2010 GAO report, “Firms Reported in Open Sources as Having Commercial
Activity in Iran’s Oil, Gas, and Petrochemical Sectors.” GAO-10-515R Iran’s Oil, Gas, and Petrochemical Sectors.
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d10515r.pdf. The GAO report lists 41 firms with “commercial activity in Iran’s
energy sector; several of the listed agreements do not appear to constitute “investment,” as defined in ISA. That
report was updated on August 3, 2011, in GAO-11-855R. http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d11855r.pdf.
Note: CRS has neither the mandate, the authority, nor the means to determine which of these projects, if any,
might constitute a violation of the Iran Sanctions Act. CRS has no way to confirm the precise status of any of the
announced investments, and some investments may have been resold to other firms or terms altered since
agreement. In virtual y all cases, such investments and contracts represent private agreements between Iran and
its instruments and the investing firms, and firms are not necessarily required to confirm or publicly release the
terms of their arrangements with Iran. Reported $20 million+ investments in oil and gas fields, refinery upgrades,
and major project leadership are included in this table. Responsibility for a project to develop Iran’s energy
sector is part of ISA investment definition.
Effect on Gasoline Availability and Importation
In March 2010, well before the enactment of CISADA on July 1, 2010, several gas suppliers to
Iran, anticipating this legislation, announced that they had stopped or would stop supplying
gasoline to Iran.59 Others have ceased since the enactment of CISADA. Some observers say that
gasoline deliveries to Iran fell from about 120,000 barrels per day before CISADA to about
30,000 barrels per day immediately thereafter,60 although importation had recovered somewhat to
about 80,000 barrels per day by September 2011. That suggests that Iran has coped by obtaining
additional supplies from those still willing to do business with Iran.
The phaseout of gasoline subsidies discussed above has already reportedly begun to reduce
demand for gasoline. Iran has also increased domestic production by converting at least two
petrochemical plants to gasoline production, through a generally inferior process that initially
produces benzene, leading to a large increase in air pollution in Tehran. Iran also says it has
accelerated renovations and other improvements to existing gasoline refineries, allocating $2.2
billion for that purpose. Even before the subsidy reduction, there had not been significant gasoline
shortages or gasoline rationing.
Building new refining capacity appears to be Iran’s long term effort to reduce its vulnerability to
gasoline supply reductions. Iran’s deputy oil minister said in July 2010 Iran would try to invest

59 Information in this section derived from, Blas, Javier. “Traders Cut Iran Petrol Line.” Financial Times, March 8,
2010.
60 Information provided at Foundation for Defense of Democracies conference on Iran. December 9, 2010.
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Iran Sanctions

$46 billion to upgrade its nine refineries and build seven new ones, a far larger amount than Iran
had previously allocated for this purpose.
The main suppliers to Iran over the past few years, and the GAO-reported status of their sales to
Iran are listed below (with the caveat that some reports say that partners or affiliates of these
firms may still sell to Iran in cases where the corporate headquarters have announced a halt). As
noted in a New York Times report of March 7, 2010,61 and a Government Accountability Office
study released September 3, 2010,62 some firms that have supplied Iran have received U.S. credit
guarantees or contracts:
• Vitol of Switzerland (notified GAO it stopped selling to Iran in early 2010);
• Trafigura of Switzerland (notified GAO it stopped selling to Iran in November
2009);
• Glencore of Switzerland (notified GAO it stopped selling in September 2009);
• Total of France (notified GAO it stopped sales to Iran in May 2010);
• Reliance Industries of India (notified GAO it stopped sales to Iran in May 2009).
Reliance has also told press outlets on April 1, 2010, that it would not import
Iranian crude oil in 2010;
• Petronas of Malaysia (said on April 15, 2010, it had stopped sales to Iran);63
• Lukoil of Russia (reportedly to have ended sales to Iran in April 2010,64 although
some reports continue that Lukoil affiliates are supplying Iran);
• Royal Dutch Shell of the Netherlands (notified GAO it stopped sales in October
2009);
• Kuwait’s Independent Petroleum Group told U.S. officials it is no longer selling
gasoline to Iran, as of September 2010;65
• Tupras of Turkey (according to the State Department on May 24, 2011);
• British Petroleum of United Kingdom, Shell, Q8, Total, and OMV are no longer
selling aviation fuel to Iran Air, according to U.S. State Department officials on
May 24, 2011;
• A UAE firm, Golden Crown Petroleum FZE, told the author in April 2011 that, as
of June 29, 2010, it no longer leases vessels for the purpose of shipping
petroleum products from or through Iran;
• Munich Re, Allianz, Hannover Re (Germany) were providing insurance and re-
insurance for gasoline shipments to Iran. However, they reportedly have exited
the market for insuring gasoline shipments for Iran;66

61 Becker, Jo and Ron Nixon. “U.S. Enriches Companies Defying Its Policy on Iran.” New York Times, March 7, 2010.
62 GAO-10-967R. Exporters of Refined Petroleum Products to Iran. September 3, 2010.
63 http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/009370f0-486e-11df-9a5d-00144feab49a.html.
64 http://www.defenddemocracy.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=11788115&Itemid=105.
65 http://www.defenddemocracy.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=11788115&Itemid=105.
66 http://www.defenddemocracy.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=11788115&Itemid=105.
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• Lloyd’s (Britain). The major insurer had been the main company insuring Iranian
gas (and other) shipping, but reportedly has ended that business as of July 2010
According to the State Department, key shipping associations have created
clauses in their contracts that enable ship owners to refuse to deliver gasoline to
Iran;
• According to the State Department on May 24, 2011, Linde of Germany has said
it had stopped supplying gas liquefaction technology to Iran, contributing to
Iran’s decision to suspend its LNG program.
Firms Believed to Still Be Supplying Gasoline or Related Equipment
• The firms sanctioned by the Administration on May 24, 2011 (discussed above):
PCCI (Jersey/Iran); Royal Oyster Group (UAE); Speedy Ship (UAE/Iran);
Tanker Pacific (Singapore); Ofer Brothers Group (Israel); Associated
Shipbroking (Monaco); and Petroleos de Venezuela (Venezuela). These firms
have not announced cessation of deliveries to Iran following the sanctioning.
• Zhuhai Zhenrong, Unipec, and China Oil of China are said by GAO to still be
selling to Iran and have not denied continuing sales to the GAO; (Zhuhai
Zhenrong was sanctioned for this activity on January 12, 2012, as noted above,
but there are no indications it has stopped selling the activity.)
• Emirates National Oil Company of UAE was reported by GAO to still be selling
to Iran, and another UAE energy trader, FAL, was sanctioned on January 12,
2012, as discussed above.
• Hin Leong Trading of Singapore was reported by GAO to still be selling gasoline
to Iran and Kuo Oil of Singapore was sanctioned for selling gasoline to Iran on
January 12, 2012, as discussed above;
• Some refiners in Bahrain reportedly may still be selling gasoline to Iran.
Additional Sanctions: Possible Legislative,
Administrative, and Multilateral Action

As discussed above, the Administration and its international partners have now begun to sanction
what Iran perceives is its vital interest—its oil exports. However, the Administration maintains
that the implementation of the oil-related sanctions be calibrated so as not to cause a sudden spike
in world oil prices or a backlash among key U.S. partners that would fracture international
solidarity against Iran. Some in the 112th Congress believe that the cumulative effect of U.S. and
international sanctions—even after the EU embargo and other steps taken—remain insufficient to
accomplish key U.S. policy goals toward Iran, and are advocating further steps. Still, the
Administration prefers taking its own action—which it can calibrate to take into account the
views of U.S. partner countries—rather than be bound by specific congressional requirements.
Major Bills Pending (H.R. 1905, H.R. 2105, S. 1048, S. 2101)
Several major bills are pending. A House bill, H.R. 1905, the “Iran Threat Reduction Act of 2011”
was marked up by the House Foreign Affairs Committee on November 2, 2011, along with H.R.
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2105 (“The Iran, North Korea, and Syria Nonproliferation Reform and Modernization Act.”) The
latter bill is highly similar to S. 1048, which is discussed below. Both House bills were passed by
the House on December 14, 2011. H.R. 2105 passed 418-2, and H.R. 1905 passed 410-11. On
February 2, 2012, the Senate Banking Committee ordered to be reported S. 2101, the Iran
Sanctions, Accountability, and Human Rights Act, that combines elements of these earlier bills.
H.R. 1905 (Iran Threat Reduction Act of 2011)
As passed, H.R. 1905, contains language restating provisions of ISA and would:
• Add two sanctions to the available ISA menu: a ban on visas for the principal
officers or controlling shareholders of sanctioned firms (and their subsidiaries,
parents, and affiliates); and application of any other ISA sanction to the principal
officers of a sanctioned firm.
• Require the President to impose at least six out of the expanded ISA menu of 11
available sanctions on any sanctioned firm.
• Make subject to ISA sanctions (majority of the menu) any firm that helps Iran
issue sovereign debt.
• Subject U.S. persons to penalty if they conduct any business with the IRGC or its
affiliated entities, or with any foreign firm that conducts such banned transactions
with the IRGC or its affiliates.
• Ban commerce between Iran and subsidiaries of U.S. firms, in cases where the
subsidiary is controlled or more than 50% owned by the parent firm.
• Ban previously permissible licensing of the sale to Iran of U.S. equipment to
provide for the safe operation of Iran’s civilian aircraft fleet.
• State that it is U.S. policy to support those in Iran seeking democracy, and require
an Administration submission to Congress of a comprehensive strategy to help
the Iranian people circumvent regime censorship and monitoring of their use of
the Internet or other media.
• Require an Administration report listing all persons who are members of named
Iranian government institutions, including high ranking IRGC officers—and ban
visas for the named individuals.
• Ban contact between any U.S. official and any Iranian official who poses a threat
to the United States or is affiliated with terrorist organizations.
• Contain elements similar to H.R. 740 on Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) disclosures, discussed further below.
• Sanction Iran’s Central Bank if the President determines that it helped Iran
acquire WMD or facilitated transactions for the Revolutionary Guard or for
entities sanctioned by the United States. (This sanction may have been mooted by
enactment of P.L. 112-81, discussed further below.)
• Set as U.S. policy to press Iraq not to close Camp Ashraf, an encampment in Iraq
which houses about 3,300 Iranian oppositionists, unless the residents can be
resettled. The Camp Ashraf issue is discussed in detail in CRS Report RL32048,
Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses, by Kenneth Katzman.
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H.R. 2105/S. 1048: The Iran, North Korea, and Syria Nonproliferation Reform
and Modernization Act/Iran, North Korea, and Syria Sanctions Consolidation
Act of 2011

A Senate bill that focuses primarily on economic sanctions and proliferation sanctions is S. 1048,
introduced May 23, 2011. H.R. 2105, which has provisions similar to S. 1048 was passed on
December 14, 2011, as noted above. Among other provisions, S. 1048:
• States (§101) that it is the policy of the United States to prevent Iran from
acquiring a nuclear weapons capability.
• Primarily targets affiliates of the IRGC for sanctions, and expands the list of
sanctions (adding a ban on financing, aid, or investment) to be imposed on
violating entities named under the Iran, North Korea, Syria, Non-Proliferation
Act INKSNA), discussed earlier in this paper.
• Like H.R. 1905, subjects to ISA sanctions purchases of Iranian oil or gas in
which the IRGC or its affiliates are involved.
• Like H.R. 1905, mandates sanctions (§123, a ban on U.S. government contracts
and ban on imports to the United States) on any entity determined to have
conducted any commercial or financial transaction with the IRGC or its affiliates.
• Sanctions foreign firms that participate in energy-related joint ventures with Iran
outside Iranian territory.
• Prohibits ships to put into port in the United States if the vessel entered a port in
Iran, North Korea, or Syria any time 180 days prior.
• Like H.R. 1905, denies visas to senior officials of Iran, but extends that to North
Korea and Syria, and does not define specific government agencies in Iran whose
members shall be named by the Administration.
• Provides for sanctions against any person determined to be providing or
acquiring militarily useful equipment to/from Iran, North Korea, or Syria.
• Contains Iran human rights-related and SEC disclosure provisions similar to bills
discussed below.
S. 2101
On February 2, 2012, the Senate Banking Committee ordered to be reported S. 2101, a bill that
combines elements of S. 1048, H.R. 1905, and H.R. 2105, called the “Iran Sanctions,
Accountability, and Human Rights Act of 2012.” The main new elements, many of which were
contained in amendments adopted at the Committee mark-up, include
• Barring foreign banks from the U.S. market if they process transactions with the
Iran National Oil Company (NIOC) and the Iran National Tanker Company
(NITC). (This is similar to a stand-alone bill, H.R. 3843, introduced on January
31, 2012.)
• Authorizing sanctions against the inter-bank communication system SWIFT
(Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication) and its directors
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and significant shareholders if SWIFT continues to process transactions with
Iranian banks.
• Expands the existing menu of ISA sanctions to principle corporate officers of a
sanctioned firm, including making those officers ineligible for U.S. visas; or
applying any other ISA sanction to those officers.
• Extending ISA sanctions to persons who participate in energy related joint
ventures with Iran.
• Codifying Executive Order 13590 that sanctions providers of energy and
petrochemical equipment to Iran, discussed above.
• Making U.S. parent companies liable if their foreign subsidiaries trade with Iran.
• Excluding from the United States Iranian students who study issues related to
Iran’s energy sector or nuclear program.
• Subjecting to ISA sanctions foreign persons who engage in transactions with the
IRGC, its agents, or affiliates.
• Strengthening U.S. sanctions against Syria.
Other Proposals in the 112th Congress
Another apparent trend in the 112th Congress, based on introduced legislation, is to expand the
sanctioning of Iranians named as human rights abusers. This builds on the human rights
provisions of CISADA and the earlier Iran Freedom Support Act. In particular, the Iran Human
Rights and Democracy Promotion Act of 2011 (S. 879 and H.R. 1714) would: make mandatory
investigations of Iranian human rights abusers; sanction the sale to Iran of equipment that could
be used to suppress demonstrations; reauthorize the Iran Freedom Support Act (see below); and
create a “Special Representative” position at the Department of State to focus on highlighting
Iran’s human rights abuses and coordinate U.S. and international responses. As noted, portions of
H.R. 1905 and S. 1048, which mainly focus on economic sanctions, also contain measures to
further penalize Iranian human rights abusers or otherwise promote Internet freedom and
democracy in Iran.
Among other economic sanctions-related measures introduced in the 112th Congress include S.
366 and H.R. 740. These bills would require firms to declare in their required filings with the
Securities and Exchange Commission whether that firm had undertaken activity that could violate
ISA, CISADA, or executive orders (13224 or 13382) and regulations that bar dealings with
designated Iranian entities.
Another bill, H.R. 4179 would amend CISADA significantly. As discussed above, CISADA
sanctions foreign banks that deal with sanctioned Iranian banks. H.R. 4179 would sanction
foreign banks that deal with any Iranian bank, sanctioned or not.
Possible Additional Multilateral Sanctions
Although there do not appear to be active discussions among the P5+1 on specific new United
Nations actions to pressure Iran, there are a number of other possible sanctions that might receive
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consideration—either in a multilateral framework or for U.S. unilateral action targeting foreign
firms and entities.
Comprehensive Oil Embargo
Most experts believe that the most effective sanction would be a mandated, worldwide embargo
on the purchase of Iranian crude oil. Despite the imposition of an embargo on Iranian oil
purchases by the EU, there are no indications that a comprehensive worldwide embargo is to be
proposed at the United Nations in the near term or that doing so would achieve consensus. A U.S.
unilateral move to compel others to cease purchasing Iranian oil does not appear under
consideration, although the sanctions against Iran’s Central Bank approaches that position. Short
of imposing a military quarantine on Iran, the United States does not have the ability, by itself, to
prevent Iran from exporting oil.
In the 111th Congress, Representative Sherman introduced H.R. 6296, which, in Section 202,
would amend ISA to make sanctionable “long term agreements” to buy oil from Iran—
agreements that would involve large, up-front payments to Iran for purchases of oil over a long
period of time. A provision of that bill would have extended ISA sanctionability to any energy
project conducted with NIOC, anywhere in the world. An amended version of the bill was
introduced in the 112th Congress (H.R. 1655, introduced April 15, 2011). Other pending
provisions of H.R. 1905 and S. 1048 would sanction oil related transactions with Iran if those
transactions involve the IRGC.
Iran “Oil-Free Zone”
As noted above, a voluntary ban on importing Iranian oil has been imposed by the EU. Prior to
the EU move, there was discussion of forcing a similar result by closing the loophole in the U.S.
trade ban under which Iranian crude oil, when mixed with other countries’ oils at foreign
refineries in Europe and elsewhere, can be imported as refined product. That would likely cause
EU and other major refiners to stop buying Iranian oil. The basis of the proposal, outlined by a
think-tank called the Foundation of Defense of Democracies, is that restricting Iranian oil to use
by only a limited number of refineries would force down the price received by Iran for its oil,
although without raising the world price of oil significantly, if at all. Some argue this concept has
been overtaken by events because of the EU oil embargo, while others say the step still has value
in making sure the EU oil embargo on Iran is not easily lifted or modified.
Other Possibilities
Other possible international steps would likely have less of an adverse economic effect on the
countries imposing those sanctions on Iran but would, if enacted in a U.N. Security Council
resolution, be binding on U.N. member states and presumably have greater effect than would
such steps by the United States alone or in concert with its allies. However, aspects of many of
these ideas are now so widely adopted by U.S. partner countries so as to possible moot their
inclusion in any new U.N. Resolution.
Mandating Reductions in Diplomatic Exchanges with Iran or Prohibiting Travel
by Iranian Officials. Some have suggested a worldwide ban on travel to Iranian
civilian officials, such as those involved in suppressing democracy activists.
Some have called on countries to reduce their diplomatic presence in Iran, or to
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expel some Iranian diplomats from Iranian embassies in their territories.
However, the EU came one step closer to this option after the November 29
attack on the British Embassy in Tehran: Britain closed the Iranian embassy in
Britain, and Norway, France, Germany, and the Netherlands withdrew their
ambassadors. The EU, as noted, on December 1 named numerous Iranian persons
as subject to a visa ban.
Barring Iran from International Sporting Events. A further option is to limit
sports or cultural exchanges with Iran, such as Iran’s participation in the World
Cup soccer tournament. However, many experts oppose using sporting events to
accomplish political goals.
Banning Passenger Flights to and from Iran. Bans on flights to and from Libya
were imposed on that country in response to the finding that its agents were
responsible for the December 21, 1988, bombing of Pan Am 103 (now lifted).
There are no indications that a passenger aircraft flight ban is under consideration
among the P5+1.
A Ban on Exports to Iran of Refined Oil Products and Energy Equipment and
Services. Another possibility is to make compulsory a worldwide ban on sales of
energy equipment or services to Iran. Such a measure would be aimed at firms
not banned or dissuaded from such activity by EU or U.S. sanctions discussed
above. During the 1990s, U.N. sanctions against Libya for the Pan Am 103
bombing banned the sale of energy equipment to Libya.
Limiting Lending to Iran by International Financial Institutions. Resolution 1747
calls for restraint on but does not outright ban international lending to Iran. An
option is to make a ban on such lending mandatory.
Banning Trade Financing or Official Insurance for Trade Financing. Another
option is to mandate a ban on official trade credit guarantees. This was not made
mandatory by Resolution 1929, but several countries imposed this sanction (as
far as most trade financing) subsequently. In discussions that led to Resolution
1929, a ban on investment in Iranian bonds reportedly was considered but deleted
to attract China and Russia’s support.
Banning Worldwide Investment in Iran’s Energy Sector. This option would
represent an “internationalization” of the Iran Sanctions Act. Such a step is
authorized, not mandated, by Resolution 1929, and a growing number of
countries have used that authority to impose these sanctions on Iran.
Restricting Operations of and Insurance for Iranian Shipping. One option,
reportedly long under consideration, has been to ban the provision of insurance,
or reinsurance, for any shipping to Iran. A call for restraint is in Resolution 1929,
but is not mandatory. The EU and other national measures announced
subsequently did include this sanction (IRISL) to operate. (The United States has
imposed sanctions on IRISL.)
Imposing a Worldwide Ban on Sales of Arms to Iran. Resolution 1929 imposes a
ban on sales of major weapons systems to Iran, but another option is to extend
that ban to all lethal equipment.

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Table 5. Provisions and Implementation of CISADA (P.L. 111-195)
General Goals and Overview: Expand the authorities of the Iran Sanctions Act (ISA, P.L. 104-172) to deter sales
by foreign companies of gasoline to Iran. Adds new provisions sanctioning Iranians determined to be involved in
human rights abuses and prohibiting transactions with foreign banks that conduct business with Revolutionary Guard
and U.N.-sanctioned Iranian entities.
Statement of U.S. Policy on Sanctioning Iran’s Central Bank (Bank Markazi):
Section 104 (see below) contains sense of Congress urging U.S. sanctions against Iranian Central Bank and would
prohibit U.S. bank dealings with any financial institution that helps the Central Bank facilitate circumvention of U.N.
resolutions on Iran.
Extension of ISA to Sales of Gasoline:
Section 102(a) contains provisions amending ISA to make sanctionable sales of gasoline and provision of services and
equipment that Iran could use to manufacture its own gasoline or import gasoline. Such services include shipping or
shipping insurance, and equipment (such as ships).
Sets dollar value “trigger” for such sales or services at $1 million transaction, or $5 million aggregate value
(equipment or gasoline sales) in a one-year period.
Specifies that what is sanctionable includes helping Iran develop its liquefied natural gas (LNG) sector. Products whose
sales are sanctionable include LNG tankers and products to build pipelines used to transport oil or LNG. Includes
aviation fuel in definition of refined petroleum.
Formally reduces investment threshold to $20 million to trigger sanctionability.
Expansion of ISA Sanctions:
Section 102(b) amends ISA to add three sanctions to the existing menu of six sanctions in ISA and requires the President
to impose 3 out of the 9 specified sanctions on entities determined to be violators.
(As it previously existed, ISA required the imposition of two out of six sanctions of the menu.)
U.S. Government Enforcement Mechanism:
Section 102(b) amends ISA by adding a provision similar to the House version: requiring, within 90 days of enactment
(by October 1, 2010) new Federal Acquisition Regulations that mandate that firms to certify that they are not in
violation of ISA as a condition of receiving a U.S. government contract, and providing for penalties for any falsification.
The Civilian Agency Acquisition Council issued the needed regulations (interim ruling) on September 29, 2010.
Paperwork that firms must sign making that certification now included as part of their contract signature package.
Additional Sanctions Against Suppliers of Nuclear, Missile, or Advanced Conventional Weapons
Technology to Iran:

Section 102(a)(2) amends ISA by adding a prohibition on licensing of nuclear materials, facilities, or technology to any
country which is the parent country of an entity determined to be sanctioned under ISA for providing WMD
technology to Iran.
Waiver is provided on vital national security interest grounds.
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Alterations to Waiver and Implementation Provisions:
Section 102(g) amends ISA to make mandatory the beginning of an investigation of potential y sanctionable activity
upon receipt of credible information of a potential violation. Makes mandatory a decision on sanctionability within 180
days of the beginning of such an investigation. (Previously, 180-day period was nonbinding.)
Mandatory investigation (which goes into effect July 1, 2011) of gasoline sales to Iran can be delayed for 180 days
subject to a report—by June 1, 2011—certifying that there has been a substantial reduction in gasoline sales to Iran as
a result of CISADA.
Section 102(c) sets 9(c) waiver standard as “necessary to the national interest”
Section 102(g) also alters existing 4(c) ISA waiver to delay sanctions on firms of countries that are “closely
cooperating” with U.S. efforts against Iran’s WMD programs. (This is not an automatic “carve out” for cooperating
countries.)
Section 102(g)(3) adds to ISA a “special rule” that no investigation of a potential violation need be started if a firm has
ended or pledged to end its violating activity in/with Iran.
“Special rule” invoked twice, as discussed above.
Required Reports:
Various reporting requirements throughout (separate from those required to trigger or justify the various sanctions
or waivers). These reporting requirements are:
- Amendment of Section 10 of ISA to include a report, within 90 days of enactment, and annual thereafter, on trade
between Iran and the countries of the Group of 20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors. (From House
version)
- Section 110 of the law (not an amendment to ISA) requires a report within 90 days, and every 180 days hence, on
investments made in Iran’s energy sector since January 1, 2006. The report must include significant joint ventures
outside Iran in which Iranian entities are involved.
- The Section 110 report is to include an estimate of the value of ethanol imported by Iran during the reporting
period.
Not clear whether Section 110 reports have been submitted to Congress.
- Section 111 (not an ISA amendment) requires a report within 90 days on the activities of export credit agencies of
foreign countries in guaranteeing financing for trade with Iran).
Not clear whether report was submitted to Congress.
Expansion of ISA Definitions:
Does not include export credit agencies as a sanctionable entity under ISA (as amended). (However, a report is
required on export credit agency activity, as discussed above.)
Does include LNG as petroleum resources.
As discussed in text, eliminates specific exemption of application of ISA sanctions energy sector equipment and
services. This change largely mooted by November 2011 Executive Order, discussed above, which specifically
sanctions sales to Iran of such equipment.
Termination Provisions:
The amendments to ISA in this law terminate if the President certifies that Iran has ceased WMD development, and
has qualified for removal from the U.S. terrorism list.
However, the pre-existing version of ISA would continue to apply until the President also certifies that Iran poses no
significant threat to U.S. national security, interests, or allies.
ISA Sunset:
Extends ISA sunset to December 31, 2016.
It was previously scheduled to “sunset” on December 31, 2011, as amended by the Iran Freedom Support Act (P.L.
109-293).
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Additional Provisions That Are Not Amendments to ISA
Modification to U.S. Ban on Trade With and Investment in Iran:
Bans all imports of Iranian origin from the United States, with the exception of informational material. Previously,
modifications to the U.S. trade ban with Iran (Executive Order 12959 of May 6, 1995) that became effective in 2000
permit imports of Iranian luxury goods, such as carpets, caviar, nuts, and dried fruits.
- Reiterates/codifies prior provisions of U.S. trade ban related to U.S. exports to Iran, which prohibit exports to Iran
of all goods except food and medical devices, informational material, articles used for humanitarian assistance to Iran,
or goods needed to ensure safe operation of civilian aircraft.
Contains a new section that the existing U.S. ban (by executive order) on most exports to Iran not include the
exportation of services for Internet communications.
Provision also states that the ban on most exports should not include goods or services needed to help non-
governmental organizations support democracy in Iran.
Both provisions designed to support opposition protesters linked to Iran’s “Green movement.”
Implementation: In July 2010, Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control issued a statement that,
effective September 29, 2010, the general license for imports of Iranian luxury goods will be eliminated (no such
imports allowed). This went into effect that day.
Freezing of Assets/Travel Restriction on Revolutionary Guard and Related Entities and Persons:
Mandates the President to freeze the assets of Iranian diplomats, IRGC, or other Iranian official personnel deemed a
threat to U.S. national security under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.).
Provision requires freezing of assets of families and associates of persons so designated. Also calls for a ban on travel
of IRGC and affiliated persons.
Application of U.S. Trade Ban to Subsidiaries:
No provision
Mandatory Sanctions on Financial Institutions that Help Iran’s Sanctioned Entities:
Section 104(c) requires the Treasury Department to develop regulations (within 90 days of enactment) to prohibit
and specify penalties for any U.S. financial transactions with any foreign financial institution that
- facilitates efforts by the Revolutionary Guard to acquire WMD or fund terrorism
- facilitate the activities of any person sanctioned under U.N. resolutions on Iran.
- facilitates the efforts by Iran’s Central Bank to support the Guard’s WMD acquisition efforts or support any U.N.-
sanctioned entity
Section 104(d) requires penalties to be specified in regulations within 90 days.
Section 104(e) requires regulations (no date specified) to make this requirement retroactive to existing accounts,
pending an audit by the U.S. banks involved.
Implementation: Treasury Department regulations implementing Section 104(c) and (d) provisions issued August
16, 2010. Regulations to implement 104(e) finalized in October 2011, based on proposals by the Treasury
Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FINCEN).
Sanctions on Iranian Human Rights Abusers:
Section 105 requires, within 90 days, a report listing Iranian officials (or affiliates) determined responsible for or
complicit in serious human rights abuses since the June 12, 2009, Iranian election. Those listed are ineligible for a U.S.
visa, their U.S, property is to be blocked, and transactions with those listed are prohibited.
On September 29, 2010, President Obama issued Executive Order 13553 providing for these sanctions. See human
rights section of this paper for Iranians sanctioned.
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Sanctioning Certain Information Technology Sales to Iran:
Section 106 prohibits U.S. executive agencies from contracting with firms that export sensitive technology to Iran.
“Sensitive technology” is defined as hardware, software, telecommunications equipment, or other technology that
restricts the free flow of information in Iran or which monitor or restrict “speech” of the people of Iran.
The contracting restriction is to be imposed “pursuant to such regulations as the President may prescribe.”
The contracting regulations issued September 29, 2010, “partial y” implement this requirement, with further
regulations to be issued.
Treasury Department Authorization to prevent misuse of the U.S. financial system by Iran
or other countries:

Section 109 authorized $102 million for FY2011 and “sums as may be necessary” for FY2012 and 2013 to the
Treasury Department Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence. Another $100 million was authorized for FY2011
for the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, and $113 million for FY2011 for the Bureau of Industry and Security
for the Department of Commerce
Hezbollah:
Section 113 contains a sense of Congress that the President impose the full range of sanctions under the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701) on Hezbol ah, and that the President renew international efforts
to disarm Hezbol ah in Lebanon (as cal ed for by U.N. Security Council Resolutions 1559 and 1701).
Divestment:
Title II prevents criminal, civil, or administrative action against any investment firm or officer or adviser based on its
decision to divest from securities that
- have investments or operations in Sudan described in the Sudan Accountability and Divestment Act of 2007
- or, engage in investments in Iran that would be considered sanctionable by the Senate bill.
Prevention of Transshipment, Reexportation, or Diversion of Sensitive Items to Iran:
Requires a report by the Director of National Intelligence that identifies all countries considered a concern to allow
transshipment or diversion of WMD-related technology to Iran (technical y: “items subject to the provision of the
Export Administration Regulations”).
Section 303 requires the Secretary of Commerce to designate a country as a “Destination of Possible Diversion
Concern” if such country is considered to have inadequate export controls or is unwilling to prevent the diversion of
U.S. technology to Iran.
Designation would set up a strict licensing requirement for U.S. exports of sensitive technologies to that country.
List of countries that are believed to be al owing diversion of specified goods or technology to Iran to be named in a
report provided within 180 days of enactment.
Implementation: Not clear that the required report has been submitted.

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Table 6. Entities Sanctioned Under U.N. Resolutions and
U.S. Laws and Executive Orders
(Persons listed are identified by the positions they held when designated; some have since changed.)
Entities Named for Sanctions Under Resolution 1737
Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEIO) Mesbah Energy Company (Arak supplier)
Kalaye Electric (Natanz supplier))
Pars Trash Company (centrifuge program) Farayand Technique (centrifuge program)
Defense Industries Organization (DIO)
7th of Tir (DIO subordinate)
Shahid Hemmat Industrial Group (SHIG)—missile program
Shahid Bagheri Industrial Group (SBIG)—missile program
Fajr Industrial Group (missile program)
Mohammad Qanadi, AEIO Vice President
Behman Asgarpour (Arak manager)
Ehsan Monajemi (Natanz construction manager)
Jafar Mohammadi (Adviser to AEIO)
Gen. Hosein Salimi (Commander, IRGC Air Force)
Dawood Agha Jani (Natanz official)
Ali Hajinia Leilabadi (director of Mesbah Energy)
Lt. Gen. Mohammad Mehdi Nejad Nouri (Malak Ashtar University of Defence Technology rector)
Bahmanyar Morteza Bahmanyar (AIO official)
Reza Gholi Esmaeli (AIO official)
Ahmad Vahid Dastjerdi (head of Aerospace Industries Org., AIO)
Maj. Gen. Yahya Rahim Safavi (Commander in Chief, IRGC)
Entities/Persons Added by Resolution 1747
Ammunition and Metallurgy Industries Group (controls 7th of Tir)
Parchin Chemical Industries (branch of DIO)
Karaj Nuclear Research Center
Novin Energy Company
Cruise Missile Industry Group
Sanam Industrial Group (subordinate to AIO)
Ya Mahdi Industries Group
Kavoshyar Company (subsidiary of AEIO)
Sho’a Aviation (produces IRGC light aircraft for asymmetric warfare)
Bank Sepah (funds AIO and subordinate entities)
Esfahan Nuclear Fuel Research and Production Center and Esfahan Nuclear Technology Center
Qods Aeronautics Industries (produces UAV’s, para-gliders for IRGC asymmetric warfare)
Pars Aviation Services Company (maintains IRGC Air Force equipment)
Gen. Mohammad Baqr Zolqadr (IRGC officer serving as deputy Interior Minister
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Brig. Gen. Qasem Soleimani (Qods Force commander)
Fereidoun Abbasi-Davani (senior defense scientist)
Mohasen Fakrizadeh-Mahabai (defense scientist)
Seyed Jaber Safdari (Natanz manager)
Mohsen Hojati (head of Fajr Industrial Group)
Ahmad Derakshandeh (head of Bank Sepah)
Brig. Gen. Mohammad Reza Zahedi (IRGC ground forces commander)
Amir Rahimi (head of Esfahan nuclear facilities)
Mehrdada Akhlaghi Ketabachi (head of SBIG)
Naser Maleki (head of SHIG)
Brig. Gen. Morteza Reza’i (Deputy commander-in-chief, IRGC)
Vice Admiral Ali Akbar Ahmadiyan (chief of IRGC Joint Staff)
Brig. Gen. Mohammad Hejazi (Basij commander)
Entities Added by Resolution 1803
Thirteen Iranians named in Annex 1 to Resolution 1803; al reputedly involved in various aspects of nuclear program. Bans travel
for five named Iranians.
Electro Sanam Co.
Abzar Boresh Kaveh Co. (centrifuge production)
Barzaganin Tejaral Tavanmad Saccal
Jabber Ibn Hayan
Khorasan Metallurgy Industries
Niru Battery Manufacturing Co. (Makes batteries for Iranian military and missile systems)
Ettehad Technical Group (AIO front co.)
Industrial Factories of Precision
Joza Industrial Co.
Pshgam (Pioneer) Energy Industries
Tamas Co. (involved in uranium enrichment)
Safety Equipment Procurement (AIO front, involved in missiles)
Entities Added by Resolution 1929
Over 40 entities added; makes mandatory a previously nonbinding travel ban on most named Iranians of previous resolutions.
Adds one individual banned for travel—AEIO head Javad Rahiqi
Amin Industrial Complex
Armament Industries Group
Defense Technology and Science Research Center (owned or control ed by Ministry of Defense)…….
Doostan International Company
Farasakht Industries
First East Export Bank, PLC (only bank added by Resolution 1929)
Kaveh Cutting Tools Company
M. Babaie Industries
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Malek Ashtar University (subordinate of Defense Technology and Science Research Center, above)
Ministry of Defense Logistics Export (sells Iranian made arms to customers worldwide)
Mizan Machinery Manufacturing
Modern Industries Technique Company
Nuclear Research Center for Agriculture and Medicine (research component of the AEIO)
Pejman Industrial Services Corp.
Sabalan Company
Sahand Aluminum Parts Industrial Company
Shahid Karrazi Industries
Shahid Sattari Industries
Shahid Sayyade Shirazi Industries (acts on behalf of the DIO)
Special Industries Group (another subordinate of DIO)
Tiz Pars (cover name for SHIG)
Yazd Metallurgy Industries
The following are Revolutionary Guard affiliated firms, several are subsidiaries of Khatam ol-Anbiya, the main Guard construction
affiliate:
Fater Institute
Garaghe Sazendegi Ghaem
Gorb Karbala
Gorb Nooh
Hara Company
Imensazan Consultant Engineers Institute
Khatam ol-Anbiya
Makin
Omran Sahel
Oriental Oil Kish
Rah Sahel
Rahab Engineering Institute
Sahel Consultant Engineers
Sepanir
Sepasad Engineering Company
The fol owing are entities owned or control ed by Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL):
Irano Hind Shipping Company
IRISL Benelux
South Shipping Line Iran
Entities Designated Under U.S. Executive Order 13382
(many designations coincident with designations under U.N. resolutions)
Entity Date
Named
Shahid Hemmat Industrial Group (Iran)
June 2005, September 2007
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Shahid Bakeri Industrial Group (Iran)
June 2005, February 2009
Atomic Energy Organization of Iran
June 2005
Novin Energy Company (Iran)
January 2006
Mesbah Energy Company (Iran)
January 2006
Four Chinese entities: Beijing Alite Technologies, LIMMT Economic
June 2006
and Trading Company, China Great Wall Industry Corp, and China
National Precision Machinery Import/Export Corp.
Sanam Industrial Group (Iran)
July 2006
Ya Mahdi Industries Group (Iran)
July 2006
Bank Sepah (Iran)
January 2007
Defense Industries Organization (Iran)
March 2007
June 2007
Pars Trash (Iran, nuclear program)
Farayand Technique (Iran, nuclear program)
Fajr Industries Group (Iran, missile program)
Mizan Machine Manufacturing Group (Iran, missile prog.)
Aerospace Industries Organization (AIO) (Iran)
September 2007
Korea Mining and Development Corp. (N. Korea)
September 2007
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Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
October 21, 2007
Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics

Bank Melli (Iran’s largest bank, widely used by Guard); Bank Melli Iran
Zao (Moscow); Melli Bank PC (U.K.)
Bank Kargoshaee
Arian Bank (joint venture between Melli and Bank Saderat). Based in
Afghanistan
Bank Mellat (provides banking services to Iran’s nuclear sector);
Mellat Bank SB CJSC (Armenia). Reportedly has $1.4 billion in assets
in UAE
Persia International Bank PLC (U.K.)
Khatam ol Anbiya Gharargah Sazendegi Nooh (main IRGC
construction and contracting arm, with $7 billion in oil, gas deals)
Oriental Oil Kish (Iranian oil exploration firm)
Ghorb Karbala; Ghorb Nooh (synonymous with Khatam ol Anbiya)
Sepasad Engineering Company (Guard construction affiliate)
Omran Sahel (Guard construction affiliate)
Sahel Consultant Engineering (Guard construction affiliate)
Hara Company
Gharargahe Sazandegi Ghaem
Bahmanyar Morteza Bahmanyar (AIO, Iran missile official, see above
under Resolution 1737)
Ahmad Vahid Dastjerdi (AIO head, Iran missile program)
Reza Gholi Esmaeli (AIO, see under Resolution 1737)
Morteza Reza’i (deputy commander, IRGC) See also Resolution 1747
Mohammad Hejazi (Basij commander). Also, Resolution 1747
Ali Akbar Ahmadian (Chief of IRGC Joint Staff). Resolution 1747
Hosein Salimi (IRGC Air Force commander). Resolution 1737
Qasem Soleimani (Qods Force commander). Resolution 1747
Future Bank (Bahrain-based but allegedly control ed by Bank Melli)
March 12, 2008
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Entities sanctioned on July 8, 2008:
Yahya Rahim Safavi (former IRGC Commander in Chief);
Mohsen Fakrizadeh-Mahabadi (senior Defense Ministry scientist)
Dawood Agha-Jani (head of Natanz enrichment site)
Mohsen Hojati (head of Fajr Industries, involved in missile program)
Mehrdada Akhlaghi Ketabachi (heads Shahid Bakeri Industrial Group)
Naser Maliki (heads Shahid Hemmat Industrial Group)
Tamas Company (involved in uranium enrichment)
Shahid Sattari Industries (makes equipment for Shahid Bakeri)
7th of Tir (involved in developing centrifuge technology)
Ammunition and Metallurgy Industries Group (partner of 7th of Tir)
Parchin Chemical Industries (deals in chemicals used in ballistic missile programs)
August 12, 2008:
Karaj Nuclear Research Center
Esfahan Nuclear Fuel Research and Production Center (NFRPC)
Jabber Ibn Hayyan (reports to Atomic Energy Org. of Iran, AEIO)
Safety Equipment Procurement Company
Joza Industrial Company (front company for Shahid Hemmat Industrial Group, SHIG)
September 10, 2008:
Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL) and 18 affiliates, including Val Fajr 8; Kazar; Irinvestship; Shipping Computer
Services; Iran o Misr Shipping; Iran o Hind; IRISL Marine Services; Iriatal Shipping; South Shipping; IRISL Multimodal; Oasis; IRISL
Europe; IRISL Benelux; IRISL China; Asia Marine Network; CISCO Shipping; and IRISL Malta
September 17, 2008:
Firms affiliated to the Ministry of Defense, including Armament Industries Group; Farasakht Industries; Iran Aircraft Manufacturing
Industrial Co.; Iran Communications Industries; Iran Electronics Industries; and Shiraz Electronics Industries
October 22, 2008
Export Development Bank of Iran. Provides financial services to Iran’s Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics
Banco Internacional de Desarollo, C.A., Venezuelan-based Iranian bank, sanctioned as an affiliate of the Export Development Bank.
Assa Corporation (alleged front for Bank Melli involved in managing
December 17, 2008
property in New York City on behalf of Iran)
March 3, 2009
11 Entities Tied to Bank Melli: Bank Melli Iran Investment (BMIIC); Bank Melli Printing and Publishing; Melli Investment Holding;
Mehr Cayman Ltd.; Cement Investment and Development; Mazandaran Cement Co.; Shomal Cement; Mazandaran Textile; Melli
Agrochemical; First Persian Equity Fund; BMIIC Intel. General Trading
February 10, 2010:
IRGC General Rostam Qasemi, head of Khatem ol-Anbiya Construction Headquarters (key corporate arm of the IRGC)
Fater Engineering Institute (linked to Khatem ol-Anbiya)
Imensazen Consultant Engineers Institute (linked to Khatem ol-Anbiya)
Makin Institute (linked to Khatem ol-Anbiya)
Rahab Institute (linked to Khatem on-Anbiya)
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Entities sanctioned on June 16, 2010
- Post Bank of Iran
- IRGC Air Force
- IRGC Missile Command
- Rah Sahel and Sepanir Oil and Gas Engineering (for ties to Khatem ol-Anibya IRGC construction affiliate)
- Mohammad Ali Jafari—IRGC Commander-in-Chief since September 2007
- Mohammad Reza Naqdi—Head of the IRGC’s Basij militia force that suppresses dissent (since October 2009)
- Ahmad Vahedi—Defense Minister
- javedan Mehr Toos, Javad Karimi Sabet (procurement brokers or atomic energy managers)
- Naval Defense Missile Industry Group (controlled by the Aircraft Industries Org that manages Iran’s missile programs)
- Five front companies for IRISL: Hafiz Darya Shipping Co.; Soroush Sarzamin Asatir Ship Management Co.; Safiran Payam Darya;
and Hong Kong-based Seibow Limited and Seibow Logistics.
Also identified on June 16 were 27 vessels linked to IRISKL and 71 new names of already designated IRISL ships.
Several Iranian entities were also designated as owned or control ed by Iran for purposes of the ban on U.S. trade with Iran.
Entities sanctioned on November 30, 2010
- Pearl Energy Company (formed by First East Export Bank, a subsidiary of Bank Mel at
- Pearl Energy Services, SA
- Ali Afzali (high official of First East Export Bank)
- IRISL front companies: Ashtead Shipping, Byfleet Shipping, Cobham Shipping, Dorking Shipping, Effingham Shipping, Farnham
Shipping, Gomshall Shipping, and Horsham Shipping (all located in the Isle of Man).
- IRISL and affiliate officials: Mohammad Hosein Dajmar, Gholamhossein Golpavar, Hassan Jalil Zadeh, and Mohammad Haji Pajand.
Entities sanctioned on December 21, 2010:
- Bonyad (foundation) Taavon Sepah, for providing services to the IRGC
- Ansar Bank (for providing financial services to the IRGC)
- Mehr Bank (same justification as above)
- Moallem Insurance Company (for providing marine insurance to IRISL, Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines)
Bank of Industry and Mine (BIM)
May 17, 2011
- Tidewater Middle East Company
June 23, 2011
- Iran Air
- Mehr-e Eqtesad Iranian Investment Co.
- Bank Tejarat
January 23, 2012
- Trade Capital Bank (Belarus-based but control ed by Tejarat)
March 28, 2012:
Iran Maritime Industrial Company SADRA (owned by IRGC engineering firm Khatem-ol-Anbiya, has offices in Venezuela)
Deep Offshore Technology PJS (subsidiary of the above)
Malship Shipping Agency and Modality Ltd (both Malta-based affiliates of IRISL)
Seyed Alaeddin Sadat Rasool (IRISL legal adviser)
Ali Ezati (IRISL strategic planning and public affairs manager)

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Entities Sanctioned Under Executive Order 13224 (Terrorism Entities)
Qods Force
October 21, 2007
Bank Saderat (al egedly used to funnel Iranian money to Hezbol ah,
October 21, 2007
Hamas, PIJ, and other Iranian supported terrorist groups)
Al Qaeda Operatives in Iran: Saad bin Laden; Mustafa Hamid;
January 16, 2009
Muhammad Rab’a al-Bahtiyti; Alis Saleh Husain
Qods Force senior officers: Hushang Allahdad, Hossein Musavi,Hasan August 3, 2010
Mortezavi, and Mohammad Reza Zahedi
Iranian Committee for the Reconstruction of Lebanon, and its
August 3, 2010
director Hesam Khoshnevis, for supporting Lebanese Hizbal ah
Imam Khomeini Relief Committee Lebanon branch, and its director
August 3, 2010
Ali Zuraik, for providing support to Hizbal ah
Razi Musavi, a Syrian based Iranian official allegedly providing support
August 3, 2010
to Hizballah
Liner Transport Kish (for providing shipping services to transport
December 21, 2010
weapons to Lebanese Hizbal ah)
For alleged plot against Saudi Ambassador to the U.S.:
October 11, 2011
Qasem Soleimani (Qods Force commander)
Hamid Abdollahi (Qods force)
Abdul Reza Shahlai (Qods Force)
Ali Gholam Shakuri (Qods Force)
Manssor Arbabsiar (al eged plotter)
Mahan Air (for transportation services to Qods Force)
October 12, 2011
Ministry of Intelligence and Security of Iran (MOIS)
February 16, 2012
Yas Air (successor to Pars Air)
March 27, 2012
Behineh Air (Iranian trading company)
Ali Abbas Usman Jega (Nigerian shipping agent)
Qods Force officers: Esmail Ghani, Sayyid Ali Tabatabaei, and Hosein
Aghajani
Entities and persons sanctioned for weapons shipments to Syria and
an October 2011 shipment bound for Gambia, intercepted in
Nigeria.
Entities Sanctioned Under the Iran North Korea Syria Non-Proliferation Act or Executive Order 12938
The designations are under the Iran, North Korea, Syria Non-Proliferation Act (INKSNA) unless specified. These designations
expire after two years, unless re-designated
Baltic State Technical University and Glavkosmos, both of Russia
July 30, 1998 (E.O. 12938). Both removed in 2010—
Baltic on January 29, 2010, and Glavkosmos on March 4,
2010
D. Mendeleyev University of Chemical Technology of Russia and
January 8, 1999 (E.O. 12938). Both removed on May 21,
Moscow Aviation Institute
2010
Norinco (China). For alleged missile technology sale to Iran.
May 2003
Taiwan Foreign Trade General Corporation (Taiwan)
July 4, 2003
Tula Instrument Design Bureau (Russia). For alleged sales of laser-
September 17, 2003 (also designated under Executive
guided artillery shells to Iran.
Order 12938), removed May 21, 2010
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13 entities sanctioned including companies from Russia, China,
April 7, 2004
Belarus, Macedonia, North Korea, UAE, and Taiwan.
14 entities from China, North Korea, Belarus, India (two nuclear
September 29, 2004
scientists, Dr. Surendar and Dr. Y.S.R. Prasad), Russia, Spain, and
Ukraine.
14 entities, mostly from China, for al eged supplying of Iran’s missile
December 2004 and January 2005
program. Many, such as North Korea’s Changgwang Sinyong and
China’s Norinco and Great Wall Industry Corp, have been
sanctioned several times previously. Newly sanctioned entities
included North Korea’s Paeksan Associated Corporation, and
Taiwan’s Ecoma Enterprise Co.
9 entities, including those from China (Norinco yet again), India (two
December 26, 2005
chemical companies), and Austria. Sanctions against Dr. Surendar of
India (see September 29, 2004) were ended, presumably because of
information exonerating him.
7 entities. Two Indian chemical companies (Balaji Amines and Prachi
August 4, 2006 (see below for Rosobornexport removal)
Poly Products); two Russian firms (Rosobornexport and aircraft
manufacturer Sukhoi); two North Korean entities (Korean Mining
and Industrial Development, and Korea Pugang Trading); and one
Cuban entity (Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology).
9 entities. Rosobornexport, Tula Design, and Komna Design Office
January 2007 (see below for Tula and Rosoboronexport
of Machine Building, and Alexei Safonov (Russia); Zibo Chemical,
removal)
China National Aerotechnology, and China National Electrical
(China). Korean Mining and Industrial Development (North Korea)
for WMD or advanced weapons sales to Iran (and Syria).
14 entities, including Lebanese Hezbol ah. Some were penalized for
April 23, 2007
transactions with Syria. Among the new entities sanctioned for
assisting Iran were Shanghai Non-Ferrous Metals Pudong
Development Trade Company (China); Iran’s Defense Industries
Organization; Sokkia Company (Singapore); Challenger Corporation
(Malaysia); Target Airfreight (Malaysia); Aerospace Logistics Services
(Mexico); and Arif Durrani (Pakistani national).
13 entities: China Xinshidai Co.; China Shipbuilding and Offshore
October 23, 2008. Rosoboronexport removed May 21,
International Corp.; Huazhong CNC (China); IRGC; Korea Mining
2010.
Development Corp. (North Korea); Korea Taesong Trading Co.
(NK); Yolin/Yul in Tech, Inc. (South Korea); Rosoboronexport
(Russia sate arms export agency); Sudan Master Technology; Sudan
Technical Center Co; Army Supply Bureau (Syria); R and M
International FZCO (UAE); Venezuelan Military Industries Co.
(CAVIM);
16 entities: Belarus: Belarusian Optical Mechanical Association;
May 23, 2011
Beltech Export; China: Karl Lee; Dalian Sunny Industries; Dalian
Zhongbang Chemical Industries Co.; Xian Junyun Electronic; Iran:
Milad Jafari; DIO; IRISL; Qods Force; SAD Import-Export; SBIG;
North Korea: Tangun Trading; Syria: Industrial Establishment of
Defense; Scientific Studies and Research Center; Venezuela: CAVIM.
Entities Designated as Threats to Iraqi Stability under Executive Order 13438
Ahmad Forouzandeh. Commander of the Qods Force Ramazan
January 9, 2008
Headquarters, accused of fomenting sectarian violence in Iraq and of
organizing training in Iran for Iraqi Shi te militia fighters
Abu Mustafa al-Sheibani. Iran based leader of network that funnels
January 9, 2008
Iranian arms to Shiite militias in Iraq.
Isma’il al-Lami (Abu Dura). Shiite militia leader, breakaway from Sadr
January 9, 2008
Mahdi Army, alleged to have committed mass kidnapings and planned
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assassination attempts against Iraqi Sunni politicians
Mishan al-Jabburi. Financier of Sunni insurgents, owner of pro-
January 9, 2008
insurgent Al-Zawra television, now banned
Al Zawra Television Station
January 9, 2008
Khata’ib Hezbollah (pro-Iranian Mahdi splinter group)
July 2, 2009
Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis
July 2, 2009
Iranians Sanctioned Under September 29, 2010, Executive Order 13553 on Human Rights Abusers
1. IRGC Commander Mohammad Ali Jafari
Al sanctioned on September 29, 2010
2. Minister of Interior at time of June 2009 elections Sadeq Mahsouli
3. Minister of Intelligence at time of elections Qolam Hossein
Mohseni-Ejei
4. Tehran Prosecutor General at time of elections Saeed Mortazavi
5. Minister of Intelligence Heydar Moslehi
6. Former Defense Minister Mostafa Mohammad Naj ar
7. Deputy National Police Chief Ahmad Reza Radan
8. Basij (security militia) Commander at time of elections Hossein
Taeb
9. Tehran Prosecutor General Abbas Dowlatabadi (appointed August Sanctioned on February 23, 2011
2009). Has indicted large numbers of Green movement protesters.
10. Basij forces commander (since October 2009) Mohammad Reza
Naqdi (was head of Basij intelligence during post 2009 election
crackdown)
11. Islamic Revolutionary Guad Corps (IRGC)
June 9, 2011.
12. Basij Resistance Force
13. Law Enforcement Forces (LEF)
14. LEF Commander Ismail Ahmad Moghadam
15. Ministry of Intelligence and Security of Iran (MOIS)
February 16, 2012.
Iranians Sanctioned Under Executive Order 13572 (April 29, 2011) for Repression of the Syrian People
Revolutionary Guard—Qods Force
April 29, 2011
Qasem Soleimani (Qods Force Commander)
May 18, 2011
Mohsen Chizari (Commander of Qods Force operations and
Same as above
training)
Ministry of Intelligence and Security of Iran (MOIS)
February 16, 2012


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Author Contact Information

Kenneth Katzman

Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
kkatzman@crs.loc.gov, 7-7612

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