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5/12/2020

Oral Statement of Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence David Cohen before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Press Center

Oral Statement of Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence David
Cohen before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs
10/14/2011
Chairman Ros-Lehtinen, Ranking Member Berman, and distinguished members of the Committee: Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today to discuss the Treasury
Department’s efforts to implement and enforce Iran and Syria sanctions.
The focus of my testimony today will be the progress we are making in our financial strategies to increase pressure on the Iranian and the Syrian regimes. But first, I would like to say a
few words about this week’s revelation that we disrupted an Iran Qods Force plot to assassinate the Saudi Ambassador here in Washington.
This is a dramatic reminder that the urgent and serious threat we face from Iran is not limited to Iran’s nuclear ambitions. We have been working for several years to address the full
spectrum of Iranian illicit conduct, including nuclear and missile proliferation, human rights abuses, misuse of the international financial system and support for terrorist groups
worldwide.
This week is no different. On Tuesday, Treasury imposed financial sanctions against five individuals, including the Commander of the Qods Force and three other senior Qods Force
officers connected to the assassination plot. In taking this action, Treasury exposed the Iranian government’s involvement in the plot through the Qods Force, Iran’s primary arm for
exporting terror.
And Wednesday, we took another action targeting Qods Force involvement in terrorist activities, this time by imposing sanctions on Mahan Air – Iran’s second largest airline – which was
secretly ferrying operatives, weapons and funds on its flights for the Qods Force.
Actions like these, along with a raft of additional sanctions we have imposed on Iran over the past several months and years, have put increasing financial pressure on Iran in recent
years.
CISADA has markedly amplified this effect. As we have explained to banks and governments in nearly 50 countries around the world, CISADA offers a clear choice: a foreign bank
can have access to the largest and most important financial sector in the world – the United States – or it can do business with sanctioned Iranian banks, but it cannot do both. For the
overwhelming majority of foreign banks, the choice has been a simple one. Those with potentially sanctionable relationships quickly elected to stop that business. And where we learn
of potentially sanctionable activity under CISADA, we have actively investigated it.
Our efforts are paying off. Iran is now facing unprecedented levels of financial and commercial isolation. The number and quality of foreign banks willing to transact with designated
Iranian financial institutions has dropped precipitously over the last year. Iran’s shrinking access to financial services and trade finance has made it extremely difficult for Iran to pay for
imports and receive payment for exports. Iran’s Central Bank has been unable to halt the steady erosion in the value of its currency. And Iran has been increasingly unable to attract
foreign investment, especially in its oil fields, leading to a projected loss of $14 billion a year in oil revenues through 2016.
Our efforts in Syria are also yielding results. Since the uprising in Syria began in March, President Obama has issued three new Executive Orders to establish sanction programs that
have systematically escalated the financial pressure on the Asad regime. These U.S. sanctions – which target human rights abusers, block the assets of the Government of Syria,
impose a import ban on Syrian petroleum products, and prohibit new investment in Syria – are intended to pressure Asad to relinquish power. Our efforts have been echoed by our
European partners, who have established an embargo on Syrian oil and imposed financial sanctions targeting officials responsible for Syrian repression.
Echoing action that we have taken, just this morning the EU announced sanctions on the Commercial Bank of Syria, by far the largest bank in Syria, and its key link to the international
financial system.
As a result of these sanctions, the Asad regime is struggling to find buyers for its oil, to access foreign currency, and to maintain economic stability. The IMF has revised its projections
for the Syrian economy this year -- from three percent growth to a two percent contraction – and predicts increasing pressure on Syria’s foreign currency reserves and ability to finance
imports.
We are making progress, but there is still much to be done to prevent Iran and Syria from evading sanctions already in place and to take new steps to increase the pressure on these
regimes. In the case of Iran, we continue to focus on the Central Bank of Iran (“the CBI”). Although U.S. financial institutions are already generally prohibited from doing business with
any bank in Iran – including the CBI – further U.S. action against the CBI, if it attained multilateral support, could further isolate the CBI, with a potentially powerful impact on Iran. I can
assure the Committee, as Secretary Geithner said in his letter of August 29, “All options to increase the financial pressure on Iran are on the table, including the possibility of imposing
additional sanctions against the CBI.” We will also continue to work with governments in Europe, the Gulf, and elsewhere to impose financial measures that will ratchet up the pressure
on Asad to step down.
If the Iranian and Syrian regimes continue to choose the path of defiance, we will continue to develop new and innovative ways to impose additional costs on them. I look forward to
continuing our work with Congress to advance our national interests.

https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg1327.aspx

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5/12/2020

Oral Statement of Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence David Cohen before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs

https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg1327.aspx

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