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Bessent will examine US sanctions list and urge more disruption of Iran's financial system

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called on allies on Tuesday to'more forcefully disrupt Iran’s financing networks. He also said that the Treasury would scrubbing its outdated sanctions list to make it easier to root out sophisticated terrorist financing schemes.

Bessent, in remarks prepared for a conference on anti-terrorism finance after the G7 finance leaders had met in Paris said that participants should "stand with us fully" against Iran.

Bessent stated that "that will require our European partners, for example to join the United States by taking action against Iran, by designating its financials, unmasking their shell and front companies and?shuttering their bank branches and dismantling his proxies." It will be up to those in the Middle East and Asia, including you, to eliminate Iran's shadow banks.

The U.S. Treasury, as the Trump administration attempts to press Tehran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz in order to restore vital oil flow disrupted by U.S. and Israeli attacks against Iran, has increased its sanctions efforts through a?program dubbed Economic Fury." The program aims to disrupt Iran’s shadow banking networks and has frozen nearly half a billion dollars of cryptocurrency tied to the regime.

Treasury will update its sanctions system to make it more effective because "our enemies adapt and innovate", by creating new shell corporations.

Treasury sanctions are mostly imposed against individuals, companies, and other entities who are on the Specially Designated Nationals List. This list contains tens and thousands of designated persons and entities. These are cut off from a dollar-based financial system, and their assets are frozen. Transacting with designated entities can lead to sanctions for the person or company involved.

Treasury tailors its sanctions program to the 21st Century in order to sharpen national?security?outcomes. Bessent stated that we are reviewing outdated and obsolete designations to help financial institutions focus their attention on the most sophisticated terrorist funding schemes and sanctions evasion plans.

He said that the most effective sanctions are aggressive and targeted. Those left in place for too long may have unintended effects.

Bessent stated that sanctions are not meant to punish people, but to change their behavior. "Sanctions in place for many years without any visible or 'tangible' changes in behaviour can have generational impacts that are almost impossible to predict."

He stated that Treasury would maintain "agility to maximize effectiveness", and gave examples such as easing sanctions against Venezuela and Syria after regime changes. (Reporting and editing by David Lawder)

(source: Reuters)