Iran General NewsUS sanctions two India firms for transfers to Iran

US sanctions two India firms for transfers to Iran

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Reuters: The Bush administration has decided to impose sanctions on two Indian firms for missile-related transactions with Iran, U.S. officials told Reuters on Thursday. By Carol Giacomo, Diplomatic Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Bush administration has decided to impose sanctions on two Indian firms for missile-related transactions with Iran, U.S. officials told Reuters on Thursday.

The disclosure came after the U.S. House of Representatives late on Wednesday overwhelmingly agreed the United States should sell nuclear technology to India and rejected a move by critics to delay the vote over concerns New Delhi had not sufficiently helped the United States to contain Iran.

Congressional critics have accused the administration of withholding conclusive word on sanctions against Indian firms until after the vote to avoid endangering its passage.

The United States considers Iran — patron of the Hizbollah Islamic militant group fighting Israel in Lebanon — a major international threat, accusing it of building nuclear weapons under cover of an energy program. Tehran denies the charge.

Under terms of the U.S. Iran-Syria Non-proliferation Act, “we are going to report to Congress about transactions by two private Indian companies with Iran,” one official said.

He and another official declined to identify the firms but one official said the transfers involve “dual-use items related to missiles.”

Previous sanctions included Indian firms that sold chemicals, controlled by the Australia Group of nations seeking to limit the spread of chemical and biological weapons, to Iran’s missile-production industry.

While the administration is mandated by law to report violations of the act to Congress every six months, sanctions are discretionary but won’t be waived in these cases, the other official said.

The officials did not specify exact sanctions to be imposed but companies have previously been barred from receiving U.S. government contracts, assistance or military trade as well as certain controlled goods with both civilian and military purposes.

REPORT DELAYED

The nuclear agreement is viewed as the cornerstone of an evolving strategic alliance between India and the United States, former Cold War adversaries.

The administration has repeatedly defended India as having an excellent record of protecting sensitive technology.

According to lawmakers, the United States since 2003 has filed at least eight non-proliferation sanctions against at least seven Indian companies or persons, including two sanctions in December 2005. The new sanctions would add to that tally. By comparison, Chinese companies have been sanctioned 70 times in the past six years.

The information on the Indian firms is in a report that was due to be sent to Congress last October 1 and covers activities during the first half of 2005, one official said. Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns decided on the sanctions earlier this week.

A U.S. official insisted the administration tried to get alert Congress to the decision before the House vote. But a congressional aide said he only was told on Thursday the report was coming and no details were provided.

“Clearly they were waiting for the House to vote on the nuclear agreement,” the aide said.

He predicted that if the sanctions were known, the House would not have defeated 235 to 192 a proposal to defer voting on the nuclear deal until India cooperated more on curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

U.S. officials said that since the United States and India agreed last July to negotiate the nuclear deal and forge closer ties, New Delhi has increasingly cooperated against Iran.

They also predicted that as India implements its own new laws and international non-proliferation standards that are related to the nuclear deal, its firms will also comply.

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