Categories: Market Overview

U.S. reimposes Iran sanctions, Tehran decries 'bullying'

The United States on Monday restored sanctions targeting Iran’s oil, banking and transportation sectors and threatened more action to stop its “outlaw” policies, steps the Islamic Republic called economic warfare and vowed to defy. The measures are part of a wider effort by U.S. President Donald Trump to curb Tehran’s missile and nuclear programs and diminish the Islamic Republic’s influence in the Middle East, notably its support for proxies in Syria, Yemen and Lebanon.

Trump’s moves target Iran’s main source of revenue – its oil exports – as well as its financial sector, essentially making 50 Iranian banks and their subsidiaries off limits to foreign banks on pain of losing access to the U.S. financial system. The return of the sanctions was triggered by Trump’s May 8 decision to abandon the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, negotiated with five other world powers during Democratic President Barack Obama’s administration. That agreement had removed many U.S. and other economic sanctions from Iran in return for Tehran’s commitment to curtail its nuclear program.

Trump denounced the deal because of time limits on some of Iran’s nuclear activities, as well as for its failure to address other Iranian activity that the United States does not like. In abandoning the agreement and imposing sanctions that it had lifted as well as adding new ones, the United States is betting the economic pressure will force Iran to change its behavior and agree to a new, much more restrictive deal.

Some analysts are skeptical Iran will knuckle under to U.S. pressure, at least in the short term. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said U.S. “bullying” was backfiring by making Washington more isolated, a reference to other world powers opposed to the initiative. The other parties to the 2015 nuclear deal, Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia, have said they will stay in it. European powers that continue to back the nuclear deal said they opposed the reapplication of sanctions and major oil buyer China said it regretted the move.

U.S. reimposes Iran sanctions, Tehran decries ‘bullying’, Reuters, Nov 06
The FxPro News Team

This team of professional journalists announces the most interesting and influential articles from the major financial media as a brief summary. All such news may have sufficient potential to affect the course of trading assets.

Share
Published by
The FxPro News Team
Tags: aud

Recent Posts

Amazon Wave Analysis 16 May 2024

- Amazon reversed from resistance level 190.00 - Likely to fall to support level 180.00…

11 hours ago

USDCHF Wave Analysis 16 May 2024

- USDCHF reversed from round support level 0.9000 - Likely to rise to resistance level…

11 hours ago

Crypto market shakes off consolidation

Market picture The release of US inflation data sparked a surge in risk asset purchases,…

22 hours ago

Gold Wave Analysis – 15 May, 2024

• Gold broke daily down channel • Likely to reach resistance level 2415.00 Gold recently…

2 days ago

AUDUSD Wave Analysis – 15 May, 2024

• AUDUSD broke key resistance level 0.6650 • Likely to reach resistance level 0.6760 AUDUSD…

2 days ago

EURUSD is trying to break the 5-month downtrend

The US dollar has been under relentless pressure since last Thursday, approaching more than one-month…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies