The U.S. House of Representatives today approved - with overwhelming bi-partisan support - new, tough sanctions against Iran. The move is seen as a strong signal by the House to the Iranian government, including the incoming administration of President-elect Hassan Rouhani, that the U.S. will not reduce pressure on the Islamic Republic until it changes course on its nuclear program.
The Nuclear Iran Prevention Act (H.R. 850) significantly expands U.S. sanctions on Iran by granting the president specific authorization to bar companies from doing business in the United States if they carry out significant trade with Tehran. The legislation expands sanctions to strategic sectors of the Iranian economy not targeted by previous legislation. And the legislation is designed further to dramatically reduce Iran’s exports of crude oil and petroleum condensates.
The bill also stiffens penalties for violations of existing laws. The Senate is also expected to move quickly on its own version of sanctions legislation.
File photo: Iran’s Kharg Oil Export Terminal (Getty Images)
File photo: Iran’s Kharg Oil Export Terminal (Getty Images)