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US Bribes, Threatens Tanker Captains in Bid to Seize Iranian Ships

US Bribes, Threatens Tanker Captains in Bid to Seize Iranian Ships
folder_openIran access_time4 years ago
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By Staff, Financial Times

Four days before the US imposed sanctions on an Iranian tanker that was allegedly accused of shipping oil to Syria, the vessel’s Indian captain received an unusual email from the top Iran official at the US State Department.

“This is Brian Hook. . . I work for secretary of state Mike Pompeo and serve as the US Representative for Iran,” Hook wrote to Akhilesh Kumar on August 26, according to several emails seen by the Financial Times. “I am writing with good news.”

The “good news” was that the Trump administration was offering Kumar several million dollars to pilot the ship — until recently known as the Grace 1 — to a country that would impound the vessel on behalf of the US. To make sure Kumar did not mistake the email for a scam, it included an official state department phone number.

The remarkable outreach by such a high-ranking official was not an isolated case. Hook, who heads the state department’s Iran Action Group, has emailed or texted roughly a dozen captains in recent months in an effort to scare mariners into understanding that helping Iran evade sanctions comes at a heavy price.

“Iran knows that the success of our pressure campaign depends on vigorous enforcement of oil sanctions,” Hook told the FT. “We have collapsed Iran’s oil exports in a short period of time. We are working very closely with the maritime community to disrupt and deter illicit oil exports.”

The offer to Kumar marks a new front in the US “maximum pressure” campaign designed to starve Iran of cash and persuade Tehran to come to the table to negotiate a broader deal than the nuclear accord that Iran signed with the Obama administration and world powers in 2015.

In response to the FT story, Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iran’s foreign minister, tweeted: “Having failed at piracy, the US resorts to outright blackmail — deliver us Iran’s oil and receive several million dollars or be sanctioned yourself.”

Hook’s message to Kumar came 11 days after the Iranian tanker was released by Gibraltar, where it had been at the center of a stand-off between Iran and the west.

The vessel was seized by British commandos off Gibraltar in July on suspicions that it was ‘carrying Iranian oil to Syria in breach of EU sanctions.’ After Iran stressed that the oil would not go to Syria, a court in the British territory ordered its release last month despite a last-minute US legal bid to seize the vessel.

Hook’s emails showed the US was not giving up. His offer to Kumar, whose vessel is now known as Adrian Darya 1, came under “Rewards for Justice” — a 1984 program to combat terrorism.

According to US officials, the US has recently started using the program in its efforts to target Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps [IRGC], and will offer rewards of up to $15m for information that helps the US disrupt Iranian activities.

“With this money you can have any life you wish and be well-off in old age,” Hook wrote in a second email to Kumar that also included a warning. “If you choose not to take this easy path, life will be much harder for you.”

In the intervening two days, the US had watched as the Adrian Darya 1 made “doughnut” shape maneuvers at sea that suggested Kumar might have been deciding how to react. After the captain failed to respond, Hook emailed him to say that the US Treasury had imposed sanctions on him. Kumar did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The US effort to warn mariners about working with Iran comes as it looks for novel ways to pressure Tehran after imposing a raft of harsh sanctions during the past year.

The US official said Washington intended to start focusing even more on enforcement and would offer inducements to urge captains and crew to co-operate, while also threatening to revoke their US visas, which would prevent them from entering US waters, if they did not co-operate.

The US has also warned shipping companies and their crews that they face possible prosecution for helping the IRGC, which has been designated a “foreign terrorist organization” by the Trump administration.

The US Treasury on Wednesday unveiled a fresh swath of sanctions aimed at clamping down on the ability of the IRGC to use shipping networks to evade American sanctions.

Washington is also warning ports around the world that they are putting themselves at risk by accepting Iranian ships, partly because of the threat of US sanctions but also because Iranian vessels are no longer able to obtain international insurance.

As part of the US campaign, the Iran Action Group convinced Panama, the biggest provider of “flags” to ships, to deregister 75 Iranian vessels, including the then Grace 1.

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