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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
US sanctions nine firms for Iran arms-related deals
2005-12-28
WASHINGTON - The United States has imposed sanctions against nine companies from China, India and Austria for supplying Iran with military equipment and technology, the State Department said on Tuesday. The sanctions, which ban the companies from doing business with the US government and US companies, were based on the Iran Non-Proliferation Act of 2000, which aims at preventing Teheran from developing nuclear weapons.

“These entities will be sanctioned based on credible information that they transferred equipments and technologies referred on the multilateral control lists to Iran,” said State Department spokesman Adam Ereli. “They are serial offenders,” he added.

The companies hit were the public company China National Aero-Technology Import and Export Corporation (Catic), missile builder China North Industries Corp. (Norinco), the chemical equipment group Zibo Chemet Equipment Corp., Hongdu Aviation, Ounion International Economic and Technical Cooperative Ltd, Limmt Metallurgy and Minerals.

Two Indian chemical groups were also cited: Sabero Organics and Sandhya Organics. Also cited was Austrian firearms maker Steyr-Mannlicher.

Ereli did not provide details on what the companies supplied to Iran, but stressed the credibility of the information on which Washington based the sanctions, which took effect December 23. He noted that Norinco, a leading Chinese defense industry conglomerate, is a repeat offender.

He also praised the Austrian government for its cooperation in the case of Steyr-Mannlicher, suggesting as well that the sanctions on Steyr could be lifted quickly.
They just need to tell us everything they know.
Some 40 companies have been sanctioned since the establishment of the Iran Non-Proliferation Act. “It’s an important and effective tool in constraining Iran’s efforts to develop missile and WMD (weapons of mass destruction) capabilities,” Ereli said.
Posted by:Steve White

#6  The sanctions, which ban the companies from doing business with the US government and US companies, were based on the Iran Non-Proliferation Act of 2000, which aims at preventing Teheran from developing nuclear weapons.

Nice thought, but probably ineffective.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2005-12-28 10:18  

#5  Steyr sold the siper rifles under the fiction they were for the police and border police. That excuse holds up as well as selling to the Ministry of Health to shoot rats. Know any Afghan drug smugglers operating BMPs? Steyr knew they could not get an Austrian export certificate to sell to the Iranian military, so this convenient fiction. The targets are American soldiers and nothing else. The US might as well sell the Bulgarians nuclear warheads under the rubric of radiation therapy.
Posted by: ed   2005-12-28 09:06  

#4  Sanctions against Chinese companies.......whoa, man, heavy. I'll bet that they are quaking in their boots. Probably form some other company or another name.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2005-12-28 09:02  

#3  No, No, No, we've already been down the "Blame the Gun, not the Shooter" route.
Put the blame where it truly belongs, on the trigger puller.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2005-12-28 08:12  

#2  Steyr-Mannlicher sold 800 .50 caliber sniper rifles to Iran. Isuggest after the US-Iran war, every family member of soldiers killed by those rifles sue Steyr into bankruptcy.
Posted by: ed   2005-12-28 07:42  

#1  I wonder if the CHinese companies appear in the supply chain feeding into Wal-Mart, etc.

I wonder if we can tell.
Posted by: Penguin   2005-12-28 03:43  

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