US tries to seize Iranian gas heading toward Venezuela
US federal prosecutors are seeking to seize four
tankers sailing toward Venezuela with gasoline supplied by Iran, the latest
attempt to disrupt ever-closer trade ties between the two heavily sanctioned
anti-American allies.
The civil-forfeiture complaint filed late Wednesday
in the District of Columbia federal court alleges that the sale was arranged by
a businessman, Mahmoud Madanipour, with ties to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard
Corps, a US-designated foreign terrorist organization.
“The profits from these activities support the
IRGC’s full range of nefarious activities, including the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery, support for terrorism,
and a variety of human rights abuses, at home and abroad,” prosecutor Zia Faruqui
alleges in the complaint.
Alireza Miryousefi, a spokesman for the Iranian
mission to the United Nations, said any attempt by the US to prevent Iran’s
lawful trading with any country of its choosing would be an act of “piracy,
pure and simple.”
“This is a direct threat to international peace and
security and in contravention of international law including the UN Charter,”
he said in a statement.
The Trump administration has been stepping up
pressure on ship owners to abide by sanctions against US adversaries like Iran,
Venezuela and North Korea. In May, it issued an advisory urging the global
maritime industry to be on the lookout for tactics to evade sanctions like
dangerous ship-to-ship transfers and the turning off of mandatory tracking
devices — both techniques used in recent oil deliveries to and from both Iran
and Venezuela.
The campaign appears to be working.
On Thursday, the US Treasury Department lifted
sanctions on eight vessels that were recently found to have transported
Venezuelan crude. The move followed an attempted auction Wednesday by federal
marshals in Houston of 100,000 barrels of gasoline seized from a Greek-managed
ship whose owner suspected the cargo was heading toward Venezuela. None of the
five parties at the auction agreed to the minimum $2.5 million bid.
As commercial traders increasingly shun Venezuela,
Nicolás Maduro’s socialist government has been increasingly turning to Iran.
In May, Maduro celebrated the arrival of five
Iranian tankers delivering badly needed fuel supplies to alleviate shortages
that have led to days-long gas lines even in the capital, Caracas, which is
normally spared such hardships. Despite sitting atop the world’s largest crude
reserves, Venezuela doesn’t produce enough domestically-refined gasoline and
has seen its overall crude production plunge to the lowest in over seven
decades amid the ongoing crisis and fallout from US sanctions.
We are “two rebel nations, two revolutionary nations
that will never kneel down before US imperialism,” Maduro said at the time.
“Venezuela has friends in this world, and brave friends at that.”
The flotilla’s arrival angered the Trump
administration, which struck back by sanctioning the five Iranian captains of
the vessels.
The four tankers named in the complaint filed
Wednesday — the Bella, Bering, Pandi and Luna — are currently transporting to
Venezuela 1.1 million barrels of gasoline obtained via risky ship-to-ship
transfers, prosecutors allege. Of the four, the Bella is currently sailing near
the Philippines, ship tracking data shows, while the Pandi appears to have
turned off its satellite tracking system on June 29 after having spent two
weeks between Iran and the UAE. The other two were last spotted in May — the
Bering near Greece and the Luna sailing between Oman and Iran.
According to the asset forfeiture complaint, an
unnamed company in February invoiced Avantgarde for a $14.9 million cash
payment for the sale of the gasoline aboard the Pandi. Nonetheless, a text
message between Mandanipour and an unnamed co-conspirator suggest the voyage
had encountered difficulties.
“The ship owner doesn’t want to go because of the
American threat, but we want him to go, and we even agreed We will also buy the
ship,” according to the message, an excerpt of which was included in the complaint.




