Archive for July, 2010


Jul

28

Pay Attention to the Man Behind the Curtain


Posted by at 9:42 pm on July 28, 2010
Category: Iran Sanctions

What, Me Worry?An excellent article titled “The Nuclear Puppet-Master” by Charlie Gillis and David Armstrong delves into the network behind Mahmoud Yadegari, a Canadian of Iranian origin who was recently convicted in Canada for attempting to transship pressure transducers through the U.A.E. to Iran without a license. Yadegari’s lawyer tried to portray him as an innocent “rube” caught up in international machinations by Iran.

Whether or not Yadegari was a “rube” — do they even have “rubes” in Canada? — everyone knows or at least suspects that in these Iranian export transactions, there is a procurement network behind the front man who actually makes the purchase of the exported goods. And the Gillis and Armstrong article goes into great detail in describing (with names) the actual network behind Yadegari.

The pattern, according to the authors, is for the Iranian government to offer money to anyone that can procure specified technology for it. Independent businessmen try to fill these orders, usually setting up a procurement network of friends and relatives outside Iran. One Canadian investigator is quoted in the article as saying that are “thousands, if not tens of thousands” of such networks, although that seems to me to be perhaps a bit on the high side.

Most interestingly, the article ends with this:

In ominous remarks made public two weeks ago, CSIS director Richard Fadden revealed that Toronto has become a haven for those trying to acquire technology to build weapons of mass destruction. “There are a lot of people who are very, very active in this area,” Fadden said in a speech to the Canadian Military Institute.

Exporters should keep this in mind when dealing with new or unknown customers from Toronto.

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Copyright © 2010 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
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Jul

27

OFAC’s War on Right to Counsel Continues


Posted by at 9:39 pm on July 27, 2010
Category: OFAC

Tipping the ScalesThe Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”) last week revised its rules on the use of blocked funds to pay attorneys’ fees to challenge OFAC’s blocking order. Perhaps the single most odious practice OFAC is its use of these rules to interfere with the right of blocked parties to obtain counsel. It’s obviously much easier to deprive people of property if you simultaneously impose limits on their ability to hire counsel to protest that deprivation. And although the revised rules do make it somewhat easier to use blocked funds to pay attorneys’ fees, they do not go far enough to end this shameful agency practice.

If a person has his or her assets blocked by OFAC, that person has no money to pay attorneys to challenge the blocking order unless some of the assets are unblocked. OFAC rules permit funds to be blocked but only in the case of U.S. citizens. And even then, the amounts that can be unblocked under the rules are unreasonably low and clearly designed to hinder the right of the victim of the agency action to hire competent counsel.

The rules limit payments to attorneys to a maximum of $125 per hour up to a limit of $14,000 for administrative proceedings, $14,000 for district court litigation, and $10,000 for appellate court litigation. OFAC is straightforward in admitting that these amounts are not intended to compensate counsel fairly and are intended simply to make it difficult for blocked parties to obtain counsel and challenge agency action:

This policy is not intended to ensure complete compensation to counsel. Limitations on the amount of funds released to a Blocked Party are necessary to preserve the President’s authority and leverage in the conduct of foreign policy.

Seriously. OFAC actually said that. If someone can ever find counsel willing to challenge these limits, this statement will certainly come back to haunt the agency.

The newly revised rules liberalize these limits in cases involving U.S. citizens whose assets have only been provisionally blocked by OFAC. In such cases, the total monetary caps will be lifted even though the $125 per hour limit on fees will remain in place. Upon imposition of a final order by OFAC blocking the assets in question, the monetary caps will apply again.

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Jul

26

Caravan Carrying Unlicensed Goods to Cuba Clears U.S. Customs


Posted by at 8:49 pm on July 26, 2010
Category: Cuba SanctionsCustoms

laptopA convoy of buses organized by Pastors for Peace with goods destined for Cuba cleared U.S. Customs at the U.S.-Mexico border despite its cargo and its ultimate destination. The convoy, which originated in Canada and which was carrying 100 tons of medicines, medical supplies, computers, school supplies, sports equipment and construction supplies, was detained at the U.S. border with Mexico for seven hours. Even though the goods in the convoy had not been licensed for export to Cuba, the convoy and its cargo was ultimately allowed to proceed across the border.

Why the goods were not seized by Customs at the border is far from clear, but Pastors for Peace have a history of carrying humanitarian aid to Cuba without a license as an act of civil disobedience. In 1993, when Customs seized a bus on its way to Cuba as part of a Pastors for Peace convoy, the group conducted a hunger strike and the goods were eventually allowed to cross the border on their way to Cuba. Apparently, a decision has been made to allow the convoy to pass simply to avoid bad PR. On its website, the group goes so far as to say:

[Each] time the US Treasury Department backs down in the face of our challenge and allows one of our caravans to cross the border with unlicensed aid for Cuba. …

My opposition to comprehensive unilateral sanctions, such as those imposed on Cuba, has been well-documented on this blog. Even so, enforcement of the sanctions must be uniform and even-handed. OFAC can’t go after some violators and then decide to ignore others who might go on hunger strikes. Of course, the answer here isn’t to jail the religious group or seize their goods but rather to re-evaluate the whole enforcement posture of the agency with respect to humanitarian exports of this kind.

Customs did decide to make a gesture here and, as a token of ill-will, seized five laptops from the group, allegedly to see if they could be used by Cuba “for military purposes.” These were Pentium 4 laptops. I suppose these could be used by the Cuban military to play Minesweeper.

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Jul

23

ETS Stops Administering TOEFL in Iran


Posted by at 9:23 am on July 23, 2010
Category: Iran Sanctions

ETS HQThe New-Jersey-based Educational Testing Service recently put up an announcement on its website indicating that it had, at least temporarily, stopped administering the “Test of English as a Foreign Language” (“TOEFL”) in Iran.

The United Nations Security Council has passed a resolution affecting banks and financial institutions that conduct business in Iran. As a result of this resolution, ETS is currently unable to process payments from Iran and has had to temporarily suspend registration and all paid services until alternative arrangements can be made. ETS is working on a solution that will allow us to reopen registration as soon as possible. This message will be updated when we have more specific information to share.

U.S. colleges and universities typically require that Iranians, and other foreign students, demonstrate English proficiency through satisfactory scores on the TOEFL prior to admission, and the cessation of the TOEFL in Iran will make it more difficult for Iranian students to study in the United States.

It’s more than a little embarrassing for a company that tests others for their knowledge to make a n avoidable mistake on their website. The recently passed UNSCR 1929 does not prevent banks from processing payments from students taking TOEFL unless processing those payments “contribute[s] to Iran’s proliferation-sensitive nuclear activities, or the development of nuclear weapon delivery systems” in contravention of Paragraph 21 of the resolution.

ETS may have meant to refer to recently passed U.S. sanctions on Iran, but even then those sanctions don’t prohibit banks from processing TOEFL payments. Section 104(c)(1) of the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability and Divestment Act of 2010 requires Treasury to promulgate regulations (which has not yet occurred) to forbid foreign banks from opening correspondent accounts with U.S. banks if the foreign bank has aided Iran’s efforts to acquire weapons of mass destruction or to support foreign terrorist organizations. Processing TOEFL payments from Iranian students is several steps short of that.

The New York Times weighs in on the situation with this:

Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said E.T.S. was exactly the kind of organization that should be exempt from the sanctions.

“Prohibiting Toefl from operating in Iran is counterproductive to the spirit of smart sanctions,” he said, noting that the exam is often a path to the outside world for young Iranians.

“The government is not being hurt by Toefl not operating in Iran,” he said. “It’s the people, and precisely the people we’re hoping to empower.”

Neither the new U.N. or U.S. sanctions are prohibiting ETS from administering tests in Iran. At most, foreign banks, spooked by potential due diligence obligations that may be imposed by not yet adopted Treasury regulations, have decided to stop doing business with all Iranian banks.

(For those of you wondering what ETS is doing providing testing services in Iran, the company is probably exploiting the loophole in section 560.314 of OFAC’s Iranian Transaction Regulations that would permit its Dutch subsidiary to operate in Iran.)

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Jul

21

Nork iPod Sanctions Being Upgraded to iPad Sanctions


Posted by at 9:14 pm on July 21, 2010
Category: North Korea Sanctions

Kim Jong-ilAccording to this report on the BBC website, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced today that the United States is preparing new economic sanctions against North Korea. The new sanctions are clearly a response to a report blaming North Korea for sinking a South Korean naval vessel with a torpedo.

[Secretary Clinton] said the measures would target Pyongyang’s sale and purchase of arms and import of luxury goods, and would help prevent nuclear proliferation.

An international inquiry blamed North Korea for sinking the Cheonan warship in March, with the loss of 46 lives, but Pyongyang has denied any involvement.

Speaking at a news conference in Seoul, Mrs Clinton said the measures would increase Washington’s ability to “prevent North Korea’s proliferation, to halt their illicit activities that help fund their weapons programmes, and to discourage further provocative actions.”

It is less than entirely clear how exports of cognac and mink stoles to North Korea assist the Norks in developing nuclear weapons unless, of course, Kim Jong-il provides moral support to his nuclear engineers by getting tanked on Rémy and prancing around Pyongyang* wearing a mink stole.

It’s equally unclear what Secretary Clinton is contemplating here. Under section 746.4 of the Export Administration Regulations, exports of most U.S. origin items to North Korea require an export license. Most items are subject to a licensing policy of case-by-case review except for luxury items (and arms and materiel), which are subject to a general policy of denial. Perhaps the idea is to expand the list of examples of luxury items. But I have a prediction, which you can probably figure out. What’s missing from this list?

(f) Electronic items, as follows:

(1) Flat-screen, plasma, or LCD panel televisions or other video monitors or receivers (including high-definition televisions), and any television larger than 29 inches; DVD players

(2) Personal digital assistants (PDAs)

(3) Personal digital music players

(4) Computer laptops

Do you see what’s missing? It’s the gadget of the moment — the iPad. If Kim Jong-il can’t get an iPad without renouncing nuclear proliferation, well, it’s going to be bye-bye Taep’o-dong and hello iBooks app.


*For readers that are thinking of forming a rock band, “Prancing around Pyongyang” would make an excellent name for the group.

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(No republication, syndication or use permitted without my consent.)