Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Trump, US allies working to ‘checkmate’ Iran – Washington Examiner

President Trump's team is working to "checkmate Iran" through enhanced coordination with Saudi Arabia and other U.S. allies, according to Defense Secretary Jim Mattis.

"What we're seeing is the nations in the region and others elsewhere trying to checkmate Iran and the amount of disruption, the amount of instability they can cause," Mattis told reporters in Riyadh following a meeting with Saudi Arabian Ministry of Defense. "It's got to be ended."

Mattis said his meetings with Saudi Arabian leaders were "highly productive in terms of outcomes." Those meetings coincided with an announcement from Secretary of State Rex Tillerson hinting that the Trump administration might withdraw from the Iran nuclear agreement negotiated by former President Barack Obama's national security team.

"Strategic patience is a failed approach," Tillerson said Thursday during a short address at the State Department. "The Trump administration has no intention of passing the buck to a future administration on Iran."

The two comments appear to signal a major shift in U.S. policy towards confrontation with Iran.

"We have both spoken, His Majesty has talked to President Trump," Mattis said. "We have come to conclusions about our cooperation for the future. And now that we have the blessing of our leadership, it's important we actually do something with it we actually do something as we reinforce Saudi Arabia's resistance to Iran's mischief and make you more effective with your military as we work together as partners."

That could start in Yemen, where the U.S. military under Mattis and Trump has stepped up airstrikes against an Iran-backed militia group that is fighting against a Saudi-aligned government.

"Our goal is to push this conflict into the U.N.-brokered negotiations to ensure that it ends as soon as possible," Mattis added. "The international community will make progress on it. We'll have to overcome Iran's efforts to destabilize yet another country and create another militia in their image of Lebanese Hezbollah."

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Trump, US allies working to 'checkmate' Iran - Washington Examiner

Everyone treated me like a saintIn Iran, there’s only one way to survive as a transgender person – Quartz

In Iran, homosexuality is a crime, punishable with death for men and lashings for women. But Iran is also the only Muslim country in the Persian Gulf region that gives trans citizens the right to have their gender identity recognized by the law. In fact, the Islamic Republic of Iran not only allows sex reassignment, but also subsidizes it.

Before the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran there was no official government policy on transgender people. After the revolution, under the new religious government, transsexuals were placed in the same category as homosexuals, condemned by Islamic leaders and considered illegal.

Things changed largely due to the efforts of Maryam Khatoon Molkara. Molkara was fired from her job, forcible injected with male hormones and put in a psychiatric institution during the 1979 revolution. But thanks to her high-level contacts among Irans influential clerics, she was able to get released. Afterwards, she worked with several religious leader to advocate for trans rights and eventually managed to wrangle a meeting with Ayatollah Khomeini, the supreme leader of Iran at the time. Molkara and her group were able to eventually convince Khamenei to pass a fatwa in 1986 declaring gender-confirmation surgery and hormone-replacement therapy religiously acceptable medical procedures.

The Iranian governmentsees trans individuals as people with psychosexual problems, and so provide them with a medical solutionEssentially, Molkara, the Iranian religious leaders she worked, and the Iranian government had reframed the question of trans people. Trans people were no longer discussed as or thought of as deviants, but as having a medical illness (gender identity disorder) with a cure (sex reassignment surgery).

The Iranian government doesnt recognize being trans as a category per se, rather they see trans individuals as people with psychosexual problems, and so provide them with a medical solution, says Kevin Schumacher, a Middle East and North Africa expert with OutRight Action International, a global LGBTIQ-rights organization. The policy is based on Islamic notions that gender is binary and that social responsibilities should be split between men and women. If youre born a man and your body is a female then in order to protect you and the wellbeing of society, says Schumacher says, the government is responsible for fixing the issue.

For Sarah, life in Iran was divided into two very distinct parts: before and after she had gender confirmation surgery.

As a young child growing up in the late 1980s in Tehran, Sarah (who, because she is not openly trans, did not want to publish her full name) was uncomfortable wearing the clothes and playing the games traditionally associated with being a boy, and felt she did not belong at the all-boys school to which her parents sent her. You are alone against all the social norms that dictate what you should do, what you should wear, how you should live, she says.

She was a good student, but in high school, when puberty hit and gender roles grew starker, Sarah began to have difficulty coping with schoolwork and dropped out. I had to deal with sexual harassment from my classmates and from other people in society on a daily basis, from everyone that thought that [I] was a girlish boy, a sissy boy, she says. My life as a teenager was total hell.

Despite the official policy about trans individuals, trans issues are not openly discussed in Iran. And because the government heavily censors material available on the internet (a 2013 analysis found that nearly half of the 500 most popular sites on the internet are blacklisted in Iran) Sarah couldnt research what it means to be transgender or connect with others in the community.

Meanwhile, she felt guilty about her inability to fit in. Everybody expected me to behave like a man and be like a man and I hated to be like that, she says. I wondered why I couldnt be like other people. Why I couldnt meet the social expectations.

At 16, she decided to make a change. If Im not a woman, if Im not a man, I thought at least I should be a productive person and live ahappy life, she says. So she enrolled in university in Tehran, and began to study languages and translation skills. Even though she continued to live as a man, she grew more confident in her gender identity thanks to the more tolerant atmosphere at the university, and from her academic successesthough she was still years away from realizing she was trans.

Officially, an Iranian can be diagnosed as having gender identity disorder only after a complex series of medical tests and legal procedures including obtaining a court order, multiple visits to a psychiatrist, and physical and psychological examinations at the states Legal Medicine Organization. Even if you somehow figure out how to navigate this processand Sarah did notit can take over a year, according to a report compiled by OutRight Action International, a global LGBTIQ-rights organization.

When people do approach doctors in Iran about being transgender, the experience is not always pleasant or helpful. Amir, a 26-year-old trans man from Shiraz, Iran, told OutRight that when he approached a medical professional about his condition, the doctor tried to intimidate him:

It all started when I was eight or nine years old. My parents took me to see a doctor because I kept saying I was a boy. The doctors never talked to me. They just told horrible and terrifying stories to shut me up. They said things like you will die if you undergo [sex reassignment surgery], or many girls who wanted to become boys died during the surgery

All of them treated me like I was delusional. They would tell me: Its not possible, you were born like this. But I knew I had to do this operation and change my sex. I was convinced there was a way and I was just looking for some kind of confirmation, from someone, who would tell me yes, its possible! Instead, one of the doctors gave me pills, and another other one injections. [Another] told me to get out and close the door behind [me], as if I was a dirty and untouchable person.

If an Iranian is officially diagnosed with gender identity disorder, the government issues the authorization for them to legally start the sex reassignment process, and at the end of that process the court issues a new identity card, with a new gender listed. In other words, while Iran does not mandate that all trans individuals have the surgery, it is not possible to change your gender marker on official documents without undergoing the surgery.

Over the last decade, with high-profile clerics and academic centers advocating for trans rights, social awareness on the issue has grown, says Schumacher. In 2007, Molkara established the Iranian Society to Support Individuals with Gender Identity Disorder, the first legally registered trans advocacy group. In 2008, the BBC reported that Iran was second only to Thailand in the number of sex-change operations performed, and the countrys surgery industry still attracts patients from all over the Middle East and Eastern Europe. Between 2006 and 2014, nearly 1,400 people applied for permission for the process according to government figures published in Iranian media.

There are even Iranian movies about accepting trans identities: 2012s Facing Mirrors was something of a social turning point, giving local journalists a chance to address the issue publicly. The films release was even covered by state-run television and radio channels.

I was so scared of the ramifications of what I was going to do, because I thought I [would] lose everyone and everything that I had fought for.Nevertheless, stigmas remain, reinforced by the notion perpetuated by the government that being trans is a medical problem. Outrights report found that trans individuals are often subjected to bullying, domestic violence, and social discrimination. In some cases, family members disown trans relatives. Openly trans people often cant get jobs, and when employers find out an employee is trans they are often fired. Trans individuals cant rent houses or apartments easily and find it hard to get married because families dont welcome the idea of having a trans son- or daughter-in-law.

All of which is why when Sarah finally realized that she was trans, when she was in her early 20s and already graduated from college, she did not feel comfortable coming out in public. Only my family members and few of my close friends knew about it, she says. I had to hide everything.

Making the decision to go through with gender-confirmation surgery was fraught with uncertainty. On one hand I really wanted to do that and be free and liberated from all the problems of my past, says Sarah. On the other hand I was so scared of the ramifications of what I was going to do, because I thought I [would] lose everyone and everything that I had fought for. My university degree, my job, everything. I saw myself having to stand against the entire world.

Practically, she did not have the means to go through with the surgery and live independently. According to OutRights report, the cost of the gender-confirmation surgery in Iran is $13,000 and hormone-replacement therapy costs $20-$40 a monthand the average Iranians monthly income is about $400.

The government does offer some limited financial support for gender-confirmation surgery, hormone-replacement therapy, and psychosocial counseling. But funds are limited and government officials decide on a case-by-case basis which individuals qualify. In 2012, the government announced that health insurance companies must cover the full cost of sex-change operations, according to a BBC report. But OutRight has found that insurance companies still often decline to cover some forms of transition-related care, on the basis that they are cosmetic and not medical.

The government pays a lot of lip service but the actual services that they provide are extremely limited, says Schumacher. You talk to many people and they tell you that they have been waiting for many years, hoping to receive some government assistance for these medical bills, but they are still waiting.

For those who dont get the surgery, life in Iran is exceedingly difficult.

Sharia-based laws mandate segregation of men and women in schools and public transport, and Iranian law requires men and women to wear gender-appropriate clothing in public spaces. Women are expected by law to wear a hijab, which means they must dress modestly and cover their head, arms, and legs. Traditionally, this is interpreted as a long jacket, called a manteau, accompanied by a headscarf. Failure to conform to this is a crime and could result in arrest or assault at the hands of vigilantes.

If their appearance is not completely male or female, they are even stopped in the streets by the moral police in Iran, says Saghi Ghahreman, president of the Iranian Queer Organization based in Canada. These are the undercover agents deployed by the police to patrol public spaces looking for men and women dressed or behaving in a manner deemed un-Islamic, The Guardian reported in 2016. The moral police crack down on loose-fitting headscarves, tight overcoats, shortened trousers for women and necklaces and shorts for men.The laws are often extended to cover new fashions. For instance in 2010 Iran banned ponytails, mullets, and long, gelled hair for men; in 2015 the country cracked down on homosexual and devil worshiping hairstyles along with tattoos, sunbed treatments, and plucked eyebrows for men.

Hasti, a 30-year-old Iranian trans woman from Khansar, told OutRight that she was frequently harassed by Iranian police for her feminine appearance and makeup. The [police] would lift up my dress, look at my ID card and ask me if I was a man or a woman, she said. In the end they would force me to sign a pledge letter [to promise that I would no longer dress as a woman] and then release me.

Because women are expected to get married at a young age and produce children, trans people who have not gone through the surgery are sometimes forced into marriage.

Worse, a trans person who is not legally recognized can be accused of homosexuality and face the death penalty. In fact, in some cases gay people in Iran decide to undergo the surgery because the alternative is death. The sex change operation is most of the time forced on trans people by the culture and by the government, says Ghahreman.

Sarah spent six years preparing mentally and financially to go through with the surgery. She describes that period as one of the darkest phases of her life. I was so depressed and anxious about everything, she says. At that time almost all the transgender people I saw in Iranian society were involved in prostitution, were isolated, were ostracized by the society and their family. I didnt see any successful transgender people. I was afraid if I did it myself, my life would turn into a kind of new misery.

The sex change operation is most of the time forced on trans people by the culture and by the governmentBut she stuck with the plan: she worked in a managerial job, living and dressing like a man, while saving for the surgery. When she had enough money, she decided to travel to Thailand for the surgery; despite the high number of gender confirmation surgeries performed in Iran, the quality of the work is poor. The operations are done by surgeons that are not professionally trained, says Ghahreman. Almost all of the trans people who have operations in Iran are suffering from many side effects that disable their body. Every trans person I have met in the past 10 years, they have a lot of pain because of the surgery and they cannot have normal or pleasurable intercourse.

When she was 28, Sarah had sex reassignment surgery. I turned into a whole new version of myself which I loved so much, she says, likening the process to dying and being reborn. I felt more liberated than what I was in the past. Because in the past I was imprisoned within the framework of my body and my former identity. After the surgery, I got liberated from all those things. For me, anything was better, anything. At least after the surgery I got to enjoy some basic rights that I didnt enjoy before the surgery.

Afterwards, she was surprised to find that almost everyone was very welcoming and very supportive. Sarah had worried government officials would harass her during the legal process after the surgery, but everyone treated me like a saint, she says. They adore me so much and they admire me so much for doing such a courageous thingthey respect me on a whole different level. I didnt even expect thatto be respected by people for being a transgender. But it all happened after the surgery. And, all of a sudden, she could wear the clothes she wanted, change her name, and live the lifestyle of her choice.

I felt I was a monkey at the zoo Not everyone has such a positive experience with Iranian officials. Assal, a trans woman who travelled back from Iran after undergoing the surgery in Thailand told OutRight she was harassed by Iranian border police agents who passed around her medical documents to each other and laughed at her. I felt I was a monkey at the zoo, she told OutRight.

And despite the support, Sarah never came out officially. Instead, she began to live as a woman in Iran. The people who know me from the past, they know that I am a transgender, but the people who know me after the surgery, they have no idea of who I was, she says. They just think that I am a straight woman.

Sarah stayed in Iran for six years after surgery. Now 36, she lives in Canada and works as a freelance journalist and translator. But she returns to the country of her birth frequently, and helped found an organization for trans rights there with Maryam Khatoon Molkara. The culture needs to change, says Sarah. The society needs to change its mindset towards people who not like the mainstream. It doesnt matter if they are gay, bisexual, or trans.

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Everyone treated me like a saintIn Iran, there's only one way to survive as a transgender person - Quartz

Lufthansa in talks with Iran Air over catering, maintenance deals – Reuters

* Lufthansa in talks to provide services to Iran Air

* Iranian holidaymakers shifting to Europe after U.S. travel bans

* Lufthansa not in talks to expand codeshare with Etihad Airways (Adds quote from spokesman)

By Alexander Cornwell

DUBAI, April 19 Lufthansa is in talks with Iran Air to provide catering, maintenance and pilot training as it seeks to take advantage of emerging business opportunities in the country, executives at the German airline group said on Wednesday.

Foreign companies have been vying for contracts in Iran since economic sanctions were lifted last year in return for Tehran curbing its nuclear programme.

"We are in very, very intense discussions, actually almost on a weekly basis," Karsten Zang, Lufthansa's regional director for the Gulf, Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan, said at a press briefing in Dubai.

However, a Lufthansa spokesman later told Reuters by email that "the talks with Iran Air are just held to explore business opportunities in the areas of catering and maintenance. There are however no concrete plans for a cooperation."

Lufthansa Group subsidiaries LSG Sky Chefs, Lufthansa Technik and Lufthansa Pilot Training are seeking the contracts with Iran Air whilst the group is also in talks to provide services to other Iranian aviation firms, Zang said.

Iran has signed orders for 200 new Western-built aircraft for Iran Air, taking delivery so far of two new Airbus A330s and an A321.

"We are talking with Iran Air because their new aircraft are coming. They need training, of course, and we have the experience in all of these fields but we can't give timelines," Zang said.

The lifting of sanctions has not brought the economic boom to Iran that many foreign companies had hoped for.

Uncertainty over U.S. President Donald Trump's attitude to the nuclear deal, as well as remaining sanctions that limit international banking with Iran, are seen as deterring some would-be investors.

The Trump administration said on Tuesday it was launching a review of whether lifting remaining sanctions against Iran was in U.S. national security interests, while acknowledging that Tehran was complying with the nuclear deal.

"We are hoping this business will pick up because the market as such is a huge market with high potential," Lufthansa Group's Senior Vice President for Sales Heike Birlenbach said.

Last year the group axed plans for its budget carrier Eurowings to launch a service to Tehran after deciding the demand was not there, although its other airlines Lufthansa, Austrian and Swiss already fly to Iran.

Trump's executive orders, since blocked, banning citizens of some Muslim-majority countries, including Iran, from travelling to the United States has shifted travel flows to Europe as a holiday destination for Iranians flying with Lufthansa.

"It caused lots of insecurity for our customers," Birlenbach said of the travel bans.

However, the airline has not seen any changes in demand for outbound U.S. flights which continue to grow, she said, whilst a ban on taking electronic devices into aircraft cabins on direct flights to the United States from the Middle East had not brought more inbound passengers to the German carrier.

Emirates said on Tuesday bookings to Iran and the Indian Subcontinent had slowed since the first travel ban in January.

Birlenbach also said Lufthansa has no plans at present to expand a limited agreement to share route codes with Abu Dhabi's Etihad Airways to include more destinations or to develop a revenue-sharing partnership.

Instead, the two carriers are focusing on the next stage of a maintenance memorandum of understanding signed in February, though no timing has been set, she said. (Writing by Alexander Cornwell and Victoria Bryan; Editing by Greg Mahlich and Adrian Croft)

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK April 19 United Airlines said on Wednesday it planned to testify at an upcoming U.S. House Transportation Committee hearing on commercial airline consumer issues after a passenger was dragged off an April 9 flight in Chicago to make room for crew members.

SAO PAULO, April 19 A judge in the Dominican Republic on Wednesday approved terms of a $184 million fine on Odebrecht SA, which sought a plea deal after admitting to bribing officials to win contracts in the country.

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Lufthansa in talks with Iran Air over catering, maintenance deals - Reuters

Iran May Keep Same Oil Output If Others Extend Cuts, Kuwait Says – Bloomberg

Iran will probably be allowed to keep its oil production unchanged if OPEC decides to extend itssix-month agreement on output cuts beyond June, Kuwaiti Oil Minister Issam Almarzooq said.

I think they will keep the same level if the deal is extended, Almarzooq, who chairs the committee monitoring the cuts, said Wednesday in an interview in Abu Dhabi. Kuwait was the first country to call for extending the production cuts beyond June. Oil prices will increase as demand improves, chipping away at oil inventories in the second half, he said.

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Iran was allowed to increase its output under the deal as the nation rebuilds from international sanctions that crippled its energy industry. Since sanctions were eased in January 2016, Irans oil production has climbed 35 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It has stabilized this year, gaining less than 2 percent, the data show. Iran pumped just shy of its 3.8 million barrels a day allowed under the deal in the first quarter, according to the International Energy Agency.

They are not cutting, but they arent increasing output from what was agreed on, Almarzooq said on the sidelines of a conference in the U.A.E. capital. Iran is showing good cooperation with OPEC under the deal, he said.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will decide at its meeting on May 25 whether to prolong the cuts, Secretary General Mohammad Barkindo said.

Its too soon to to talk about Iran, Libya and Nigeria joining the cuts if the output reduction agreement is extended beyond June, Barkindo and United Arab Emirates Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei said at the Abu Dhabi conference. Nigeria and Libya were exempt from any obligation to cut as both countries continue to suffer production losses from militant attacks and political instability.

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Iran May Keep Same Oil Output If Others Extend Cuts, Kuwait Says - Bloomberg

Trump Mulls Squeezing Iran With Tougher Sanctions | Foreign Policy – Foreign Policy (blog)

The Trump White House is poised to ratchet up existing sanctions against Iran and is weighing a much stricter interpretation of the nuclear agreement between Tehran and major world powers.

The administration is inclined to adopt a more rigorous application of the tools at its disposal, a senior White House official told Foreign Policy, referring to sanctions policy. Among the options under consideration: broadening U.S. sanctions to include much larger chunks of the Iranian economy linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

No final decision has been taken by the president or the cabinet. But officials said some decisions will need to be taken soon. On April 25, Iran and the six governments that negotiated the nuclear deal with Tehran, including the United States, are due to meet in Vienna for a quarterly review of the accord.

How President Donald Trump decides to proceed on sanctions and the nuclear deal more broadly carries high stakes for the United States, Iran, and the wider Middle East. A concerted U.S. effort to squeeze Iran would represent a gamble that Tehrans regional push for power, particularly in Syria and Yemen, could be checked in part by increasing economic pressure.

But the approach could backfire if it causes tensions with the Islamic Republic to spin out of control or prompts Tehran to pull out of the nuclear deal. Tougher U.S. sanctions would make for a tougher re-election fight for President Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate who championed the 2015 nuclear deal but is under pressure to show Iranians a notable improvement in the economy. And a harder line on sanctions also could drive a wedge between Washington and its European allies.

Sweeping sanctions that cut across economic sectors could jeopardize the nuclear agreement and prompt Iran to withdraw, said Richard Nephew, who was the leading sanctions expert on the U.S. team that negotiated the accord with Iran.

It all really comes down to whether the people making decisions agree that the [nuclear deal] is worth keeping, said Nephew, now at Columbia Universitys School of International and Public Affairs.

The 2015 agreement imposed numerous restrictions on Irans nuclear program in return for easing an array of sanctions including U.S. measures that had badly damaged the countrys economy. President Trump repeatedly blasted the accord as the worst deal and, while on the campaign trail, vowed to tear it up, but now that he is in office, he has not indicated what he will do.

Trump doesnt have to tear up the deal to tighten the screws on Iran. The agreement, which is not a treaty, provides broad leeway to the governments that signed it in interpreting its terms, and the Trump White House is mulling taking a much more forceful stance on enforcing the deal to the letter.

There are already signs that the Trump administration is using existing legal authorities in a more forceful manner than the Barack Obama administration. Last Thursday, the Treasury Department announced it had sanctioned the brother of the powerful head of the special forces arm of the IRGC, Sohrab Soleimani, for his role in abuses at the countrys prisons. And in February, the Treasury Department blacklisted eight organizations linked to the Revolutionary Guards, as well as one of its officials based in Lebanon.

Last weeks move was a further indication that the Trump administration will be taking a much tougher line in applying sanctions than did its predecessor, said Mark Dubowitz, CEO of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies who has urged ramping up economic pressure on Iran.

Dubowitz, an influential voice on sanctions policy particularly among Republican lawmakers in Congress, said he also expects the Trump administration to pursue more prosecutions of illicit financial activities linked to the Iranian regime and of attempts to secure prohibited materials related to weapons or nuclear technology.

The sanctions measures imposed since Trump entered office were based on cases prepared by the Obama Treasury Department that were never enacted, said the White House official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the administrations policy.

We are still going off the work they did not execute, the official said.

And Treasurys recent actions reflect a heightened focus by the administration on the Revolutionary Guards, which wield major military and financial clout in Iran and have interests in numerous Iranian companies. The Treasury actions coincide with a debate within the administration about whether to designate the entire IRGC as a terrorist organization. At the moment, only the groups special forces arm, the Quds Force, is blacklisted.

Apart from designating the entire Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist organization, the administration is also looking at other options. At the moment, any entity that has a 50 percent ownership stake or more held by the IRGC is subject to sanctions, but the administration is mulling a change that would drop the threshold to a lower percentage.

Such a move would break with long-standing policy at Treasury, which has traditionally defined ownership as above 50 percent for any category of sanctions. A lower threshold would mean blacklisting hundreds and possibly thousands of additional Iranian companies and organizations with links to the IRGC, experts said. That would almost certainly cause a political backlash in Iran and chill any international interest in investing in Iran. European officials and former Obama administration officials are worried that if the White House opts for a blanket blacklisting of the Revolutionary Guards, it could effectively kill the nuclear agreement or trigger retaliation against U.S.-led forces in Iraq.

Appetite for a tougher stance isnt just found in the White House. In the Republican-controlled Congress, there is growing bipartisan support for pushing back against Iran through additional sanctions, though most Democrats want to steer clear of measures that would directly violate the nuclear deal. New bills in the House and Senate call for additional sanctions against Iran over its ballistic missile program and its human rights violations and support for terrorist groups.

The Senate bill, which has backing from some Democrats who endorsed the nuclear deal, would slap sanctions on any individual lending material support to Irans missile program. And it would also apply terrorism-related sanctions to the Revolutionary Guards.

The bills supporters say the provisions on the IRGC would merely codify existing presidential executive orders. But some former Obama administration officials argue the legislation could open the door to a sweeping designation of the entire IRGC as a terrorist organization.

The former officials say the sanctions legislation poses a possible threat to the nuclear deal as the measures could wreck the consensus among the countries that negotiated the deal.

Rather than containing Iran, such steps would isolate the United States, several former administration officials wrote in a commentary in FP.

Critics of the deal accused the Obama administration of tolerating Iranian violations of the accord. International inspectors found that Iran last year had twice exceeded limits on stockpiles of heavy water, which is used to cool reactors producing plutonium. Washington chose to resolve the issue discreetly, granting Iran some time to fix the problem. Opponents of the accord are urging the White House to insist on a more assertive interpretation of the deals provisions and appear to have found a receptive audience.

Administration officials said they are now looking at holding Irans feet to the fire over every breach, however small. One option under consideration is an incredibly strict implementation of the deal, the senior official said.

But the official added that the administration was not inconsiderate of the ramifications of the deal and was carefully weighing the benefits and the risks of a different approach.

The Obama administration, facing complaints from Iran that it was not seeing the promised economic benefits from the accord, had embarked on road shows to reassure European governments and foreign companies that non-U.S. investors could return to the Iranian market without necessarily running afoul of U.S. sanctions. Rouhani is facing an electoral challenge from a hard-line favorite of the mullahs and needs to sell the deal as a success to win re-election next month.

But the road shows convinced few: Banks in particular are leery of diving back into the Iranian market when U.S. sanctions could suddenly snap back or be expanded to other parts of the economy.

Its not surprising to me that financial institutions all over the world are hesitant to re-engage with Iran, said Daniel Glaser, a former senior Treasury official under the Obama administration who crafted hard-hitting sanctions that preceded the nuclear agreement.

Since Trump took office, the outreach effort has been abandoned.

Photo credit:CHAVOSH HOMAVANDI/AFP/Getty Images

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Trump Mulls Squeezing Iran With Tougher Sanctions | Foreign Policy - Foreign Policy (blog)