Trader says Iran not worried about billions of dollars held in Iraq
Trader says Iran not worried about billions of dollars held in Iraq
In the past, officials in Baghdad have said there is no easy substitute to imports from Iran because it will take years to adequately build up Iraq’s energy infrastructure.

TEHRAN (Iran News) –Trader says Iran not worried about billions of dollars held in Iraq . In the past, officials in Baghdad have said there is no easy substitute to imports from Iran because it will take years to adequately build up Iraq’s energy infrastructure.

They have said American demand acknowledges neither Iraq’s energy needs nor the complex relations between Baghdad and Tehran.

Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, on whom the Americans had counted to pry Iraq away from Iran’s embrace, has said that he wanted “excellent  relations” with the Islamic Republic.

Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Tuesday he had held “excellent talks” with Iraqi leaders after paying a two-day visit to the country.

The two countries have called to raise their annual bilateral trade to $20 billion from around $10 billion despite the impact of the US sanctions.

Witch hunt, ‘highway robbery’ 

Tens of billions of dollars of Iranian assets, mainly from exports of oil and gas, are frozen in foreign banks due to US sanctions on Iran’s banking and energy sectors.

South Korea holds $7 billion in Iran’s funds from oil sales, according to Iranian officials who have warned to take legal action to gain access to the funds.

Iran has also criticized Japan for holding its foreign currency resources estimated around $1.5 billion. Japan was one of the main buyers of Iranian oil before the US imposed unilateral sanctions on Tehran in 2018 under former president Donald Trump.

More than $1.6 billion in Iranian funds are further held by Luxembourg-based Clearstream clearing house, a financial company owned by Deutsche Boerse.

Last April, a top court in Luxembourg officially blocked a long-running request by the US administration to seize the Iranian cash assets as compensation for alleged terror victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

Iran’s funds frozen in foreign banks because of the US sanctions have additionally been subject to a witch hunt by the Americans who have used Washington’s animosity toward the Islamic Republic to easily win lawsuits against the country in US courts.

In January, the US government said it had seized $7 million in Iranian assets for “victims of terrorism”. Last October, reports said a US court had ordered Iran to pay more than $1.4 billion in punitive and compensatory damages to the family of a former FBI agent who allegedly disappeared during a visit to an Iranian island in March 2007.

Iran has denounced US seizures of its frozen assets as “highway robbery” and hauled the United States before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) at The Hague.