The United States is
keeping up its pressure on what it has identified as the funding sources for
the Houthi militants through the sale of Iranian oil.
For the second time in a week, the Department of
the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control targeted shipping companies and
vessels it says are facilitating Iran’s Qods Force and the Houthis through
commodity shipments.
“The IRGC-QF and the
Houthis continue to rely on the illicit sale of commodities to finance their
attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden,” said Under
Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian E.
Nelson. “The United States remains resolved
to hold accountable those who enable these destabilizing activities.”
The latest action
targets two Hong Kong and Marshall Islands-based shipowners and two vessels for
their role in the scheme. The ships had previously been identified by the
watchdog organization United Against a Nuclear Iran for their role in the
shadowy oil trade. Today’s action was also related to the joint U.S. and
UK sanctions announced on February 27 against individuals
and ships involved in the Iranian oil trade.
The first vessel
listed is the Palau-flagged Reneez, a 22-year-old crude oil tanker,
which is owned and managed by Marshall Islands-based Reneez Shipping. According
to U.S. officials, the vessel has transported tens of thousands of metric tons
of Iranian commodities for the network of Iran-based IRGC-QF-backed Houthi
financier Sa’id al-Jamal. They report that Al-Jamal’s network often uses
falsified cargo documents to mask the Iran-origin cargo onboard and to
obfuscate its ties to Iran and al-Jamal’s network.
An analysis of the
vessel’s movements shows that it was recently in the Persian Gulf. It is
currently reporting a position in Malaysia.
The U.S. is also
targeting a supertanker, the Panama-flagged Eternal Fortune (319,400
dwt). Built in 2002, the U.S. reports the vessel which is owned by Hong
Kong-based Hongkong Unitop Group has been linked to illegal ship-to-ship
transfers and also emitted a false AIS signal while receiving the STS
transfers.
Specifically, they
cite a recent transfer from another Panama-flagged tanker, Artura (150,000
dwt), which was sanctioned last week for its role in transporting Iranian
commodities on behalf of al-Jamal. According to the U.S., the Artura falsified
its AIS signal to indicate it was traveling north from Singapore while the
vessel was in the process of conducting a ship-to-ship transfer with the Eternal
Fortune, which was also masking its true position.
The Artura is displaying a
position as in the Singapore anchorage. The Eternal Fortune however
is continuing to mask its movements. The AIS signal shows it departed Malaysia but the
destination is undeclared. The speculation is that the tanker is sailing to
China.
Reports are that the
sanctions have had an effect with some of the tankers idled, but the shadow fleet has grown to nearly
400 vessels as of the end of 2023 involved in the Iranian trade according to
UANI. They calculate that this has increased from 70 tankers they
identified in November 2020 for transporting Iranian oil.