Donald Trump Announces New Sanctions On Iran After Missile Tests
The United States slapped fresh sanctions on Iran Friday to
punish Tehran for recent ballistic missile tests and its support for Yemen'sHouthi rebels.
The first sanctions against Iran by the Trump administration targeted companies
and individuals in Iran and China identified by the United States as supporting
Tehran's ballistic missile program and the Revolutionary Guards military
force.
"Iran's continued support for terrorism and development of its ballistic missile
program poses a threat to the region, to our partners worldwide, and to the
United States," said John Smith, acting director of the Treasury's Office
of Foreign Assets Control.
The measures came after Iran on Sunday test-fired a medium range missile, which
the White House contends violated a UN Security Council resolution proscribing
missiles that could carry a nuclear device.
On Tuesday, President Donald Trump's National Security Advisor Michael Flynn
declared he was "officially putting Iran on notice" over the launch.
The newest sanctions seek to lock those blacklisted out of global trade and
finance by banning any American or US-based entities from doing business with
them. They named three trading networks and individuals allegedly involved in
supplying goods to Iran's missile program.
One against already-sanctioned Iranian businessman Abdollah
Asgharzadeh involves several Chinese companies and suppliers, mainly the Cosailing
Business Trading Company based in Qingdao.
Other groups named include the Rostanian network based in the Gulf region, and
Lebanon-based Hasan Dehghan Ebrahimi, identified as a Revolutionary Guards
official whose business the Treasury said launders money and goods for the
Hezbollah militia group.
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