WASHINGTON—The White House is pushing to ease the way for
companies to complete deals with Iran, aiming to cement the
landmark nuclear agreement reached last year and make it difficult
for future administrations to undo it, senior U.S. officials
said.
The effort, which borrows from President Barack Obama's playbook
for solidifying U.S. relations with Cuba, got a boost this week
when Boeing Co. reached a $17.6-billion deal with Iran to sell
commercial jets to the country's main airline.
A Boeing spokesman declined to comment on any specific effort by
the administration. In a letter Thursday responding to criticism of
the deal from two Republican lawmakers, the company's senior vice
president for government operations, Tim Keating, said the
administration had made it clear in consultations with Boeing that
"the ability to provide Iranian airlines with U.S. and European
replacement commercial passenger aircraft for their aging fleets
was key and essential to reaching closure on the agreement."
Administration officials are also studying whether to publicly
back Iran's bid to join the World Trade Organization, a move
opposed by America's Persian Gulf allies, such as Saudi Arabia.
The global agency responsible for combating money laundering,
the Financial Action Task Force, this week is weighing whether to
remove Iran from a blacklist in a bid to improve its ability to
conduct financial transactions through Western banks. A decision is
expected as early as Friday, said U.S. and European officials.
Administration officials have said they are seeking in Mr.
Obama's final months in office to make his policies toward Cuba and
Iran, which have been controversial, difficult for his successors
to unravel.
U.S. officials are also exploring what they say are other ways
of integrating Iran into the global economy, with more
announcements expected in the months before Mr. Obama leaves office
in January. Among them is a process for giving Iran limited access
to the U.S. dollar, which administration officials said has made
some progress.
"We're not going to stand in the way of permissible business
activity with Iran," a senior administration official said. "As
long as Iran is meeting the terms of the deal, then we're going to
uphold our end of the bargain, and that is going to result in some
additional business activity with Iran."
The administration's moves to integrate Iran into international
business and financial markets, although limited to the terms of
the nuclear deal, have drawn criticism from U.S. lawmakers and
stoked concerns among America's Middle East's allies.
It is also causing friction between the State and Treasury
Departments, U.S. officials say. Secretary of State John Kerry, the
administration's point man on Iran, has been the most
forward-leaning on ways to aid Iran's economy.
Mr. Kerry and other U.S. officials are hoping an economic
windfall in Iran will empower Iranian President Hassan Rouhani,
seen as a pragmatist and a relative moderate in Iran's
revolutionary government.
Administration officials say a longer-term goal is that business
engagement with Iran will facilitate political change there, as Mr.
Obama hopes is the case in Cuba.
"Over time that could help strengthen some of the forces inside
of Iran that would like to take their country in a different
direction," the senior administration official said.
The Boeing deal with Iran Air quickly came under scrutiny from
U.S. lawmakers when the company announced it this week. The
administration sees the pact as a significant marker for the first
anniversary of the nuclear deal reached by the U.S. and world
powers with Iran on July 14, 2015.
But critics say the deal could aid Iran's efforts to send arms
and supplies to its regional military allies, such as the Assad
regime in Syria and the Lebanese militia Hezbollah, which the U.S.
designates as a terrorist organization. The U.S. Treasury
sanctioned Iran Air in 2011 for its role in ferrying supplies to
these groups.
"If Boeing goes through with this deal, the company will forever
be associated with Iran's chief export: radical Islamic terrorism,"
said Rep. Peter Roskam (R., Ill.), who introduced new legislation
this week to try to block the deal and was the recipient, along
with Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R., Texas), of the Boeing executive's
letter on Thursday.
Under the nuclear agreement, U.S. companies are allowed to sell
commercial aircraft to Iran. American companies can also request
special licenses from the Treasury Department to conduct
transactions with Iran in other sectors, such as agriculture and
medicine.
White House officials say deals such as the one reached by
Boeing, which they expect the Treasury Department to approve, are
carefully scrutinized. "We've had to be very careful in assessing
how the civil aviation sector does or does not become utilized by
the bad actors in Iran who may try to fly material to places like
Syria," another senior administration official said.
Iran's blacklisting by the FATF has greatly undercut the
country's ability to conduct banking transactions. Currently, Iran
and North Korea are ranked as the countries posing the greatest
risk to the international financial sector, due to their role in
illicit businesses and financing terrorism.
Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew in April specifically discussed
with Iran's central bank governor ways that Tehran can improve its
standing in FATF, according to senior administration officials.
U.S. and European officials said FATF could agree this week to
suspend some of the countermeasures countries are asked to employ
against Iran because of commitments Iranian officials have made to
address FATF's concerns.
"This is a technical process and we are confident that the FATF
will treat Iran fairly," said a Treasury official.
The Obama administration is caught in a growing struggle among
its allies over another economic integration avenue: Iran's quest
to join the World Trade Organization.
Since the nuclear deal last year, countries such as Oman and
Switzerland have pressed for forming a special committee of the WTO
to address Iran's bid. Iran's regional rivals, particularly Saudi
Arabia, have opposed that effort.
The George W. Bush administration once pledged to support Iran's
bid if a nuclear agreement was reached. Obama administration
officials said they are now trying to find a consensus among allies
on the WTO issue.
"We have also noted the uptick in interest in Iran's WTO
accession, and we are mindful that this is a major priority for the
EU, Oman, and others," said a State Department official. "The WTO
accession process is based on consensus, and as of now, there are a
number of countries that oppose appointing a chair to Iran's
working party on accession."
Business diplomacy has been a core part of Mr. Obama's foreign
policy approach in engaging U.S. adversaries. Mr. Obama sees the
expansion of business transactions with the West in countries such
as Iran and Cuba as the most promising means for solidifying the
president's policies there, his aides have said.
White House officials also see the use of businesses
transactions as a more effective way of facilitating political
changes in countries such as Iran and Cuba than traditional U.S.
government efforts.
While business is the overarching tool in cementing Mr. Obama's
policies toward Iran and Cuba, the two efforts differ,
administration officials said. The White House sees encouraging
business with Cuba as a way to advance the president's decision to
restore diplomatic ties—an effort Havana has embraced.
Iran, however, hasn't agreed to a broader thaw in relations,
despite Mr. Obama's willingness to pursue one. The administration's
use of business as a means to facilitate its Iran policy is more
targeted, aimed at doing everything the U.S. can to abide by the
sanctions-relief provisions in the nuclear deal to make sure it
doesn't unravel, officials said.
One point of tension the White House has faced is that U.S.
companies are more interested in doing business with Iran than Cuba
because it is a bigger market. White House officials said they
increasingly spend time explaining to business groups why the
administration can't approve ambitious deals with Iran.
"There was a sense that there would be more opportunity than
there has been," the second senior administration official said.
"And I think there's a sense that how come the European businesses
get this opportunity and we don't."
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 23, 2016 20:55 ET (00:55 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Pacific Current (ASX:PAC)
Historical Stock Chart
From Jan 2025 to Feb 2025
Pacific Current (ASX:PAC)
Historical Stock Chart
From Feb 2024 to Feb 2025