US, Gulf countries sanction entities linked to IRGC and Hezbollah

The United States and six Gulf countries have
announced sanctions on Wednesday on 25 entities linked with Iran’s Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps and Lebanon’s Hezbollah, in a move to tighten
controls on both group’s finances.
The sanctions were set by Riyadh-based Terrorist
Financing Targeting Center (TFTC), a two-year-old group that includes Saudi
Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates in addition
to the United States.
They targeted companies supporting the Basij
Resistance Force, a subordinate group of the Revolutionary Guard, that the Treasury
said are used “to oppress domestic opposition with brutal displays of violence”
and supply fighters to regional conflicts. “
Today’s action is multilateral action by TFTC
partners to expose and condemn the Iranian regime’s gross and repeated violations
of international norms, including the attack that threatens the global economy
by targeting the oil facility in Saudi Arabia,” a statement from the TFTC read.
Among the 25 was Iranian Bank Mellat and mining,
manufacturing and investment firms that support the Basij.
Four of those listed were individuals running
Hezbollah’s operations in Iraq.
All 25 have previously been named in US Treasury
sanctions announced in 2018.
“The TFTC’s coordinated disruption of the financial
networks used by the Iranian regime to fund terrorism is a powerful
demonstration of Gulf unity,” said US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin in a
statement.
“This action demonstrates the unified position of
the Gulf nations and the United States that Iran will not be allowed to escalate
its malign activity in the region,” said Mnuchin, who addressed a business
forum in Riyadh on Wednesday.