Economic Lifeline Provided
by Iran Under Strain
Syrian trade officials say
they are worried the economic lifeline provided by Iran is under strain from
plunging oil prices, Reuters reported.
Iran’s hard currency revenues have been cut by nearly 50 percent due to falling
oil prices, and Iran needs hard currency to maintain its aid to Syria.
“If it had not been for
Iranian support we could not have survived the crisis,” a senior Syrian trade
official said from Damascus. (Reuters, 19 December)
Iran granted Syria $4.2
billion credit facility in July 2013 to buy oil and non-oil products, the
officials at the time had told Reuters.
Since then the Islamic State insurgents have taken control of all Syrian oil
production facilities, and Iran has become Syria’s sole source of imported oil,
forcing Iran to increase its line of credit to Syria.
The Syrian pound, which
fell around 70 percent since the civil war began in 2011, lost another 10
percent over the past fortnight alone. Reuters, quoting two senior Syrian
bankers, reports that Iran deposited $500-$750 million in Syria’s Central Bank
more than a year ago to help stabilize the pound. It is believed that Iran
needs to deposit millions of dollars more in light of the country’s growing
currency crisis in the past few days.
Iran is also heavily
involved in a military campaign in Syria; supplying missiles, weapons and
ammunitions to the Syrian military, as well as paying for the salaries and
operations of thousands of Shia militias fighting on the side of the Assad
regime. Iran’s Quds Force officers, and those from other branches of military
and intelligence agencies, are also deployed to the country to advise and assist
the Syrian military and to lead the Shia militias in their fight against the
opposition. Iran is also believed to be paying for thousands of deployed
Lebanese Hezbollah fighters in Syria. A military campaign at this magnitude
would cost Iran billions of dollars a year.
The economic aids, like
granting an ever growing line of credit to the Syrian government, and the military
campaign are costly undertaking by Iran, mostly requiring hard currency
to be paid for. And since June, Iran is involved in another major military
campaign in Iraq, costing billions of dollars above and beyond its
commitments to Syria.
Hence, the worries of
Syrian officials in light of Iran’s recent financial woes, fearing that 50
percent cut in Iran’s oil revenues could break its back financially. However,
the Iranian officials have told their Syrian counterparts not to worry.
“Iran’s economic support for
Syria will continue incessantly,” said Iran’s Vice president Eshagh Jahangiri
in Tehran after his meeting with visiting Syrian Prime Minister Wael Al-Halqi
on Tuesday. (IRNA, 16 December)
The Syrian PM was in
Tehran to seek Iran’s continued support. The Syrian chamber of
commerce officials have told Reuters
that the prime minister was particularly asking for Iran’s help to send them
bigger quantities of petroleum products, which has become in perilously short supply in
the country.
ISIL’s control of some of
the border crossings between Syria and Iraq has also complicated the situation
for the Syrians, disrupting the flows of tens of thousands of barrels of crude
from Iraq that were delivered overland by oil tankers, making Iran the only
remaining supplier. Four Iranian tankers have discharged cargoes of gasoline
and other petroleum product by the sea to Syrian ports recently, but they did not end
acute shortage, Reuters reported.
File photo: Iran's oil exporting terminal at Kharq island (Getty Images)
Hezbollahs Al-Akhbar newspaper reported that Russia and Iran had opened a new credit line to Syria worth 6.4 billion dollars. Tehran has opened a credit line of 4.5 billion dollars and Russia opened a credit line of a billion dollars, in addition to 500 million intended for food and 400 million intended for flour.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.al-akhbar.com/node/222378
Your information is correct. Iran and Russia are too deep in their support for the Syrian government and there is no chance of any change in either policy. According to Russian media as well, political, economic and military support to Syria is about to increase even more as the S-300 are about to be deployed hence the Zionists using long range Popeye missiles in their failed raid on a storage depot at the eastern end of Damascus airport. One of the missiles was downed almost intact by the Pantsir S1 battery and taken to Iran for examination.
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