The new penalties affect
segments of Iranian industry, including construction, manufacturing, textiles,
mining, steel and iron. Other sanctions target specific Iranian officials.
“The president has been
very clear: we will continue to apply economic sanctions until Iran stops its
terrorist activities and commit that it will never have nuclear weapons,”
Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said.
While announcing the
sanctions, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo altered his explanation of why the
U.S. launched the deadly drone attack on Qasem Soleimani, a powerful Iranian
general.
USA Today reported that
Pompeo and other Trump administration have given conflicting statements about
how “imminent” the threat was from Soleimani – a critical question because it
undergirds the administration’s legal justification for killing the Iranian
general without notifying Congress.
Hours after the U.S.
strike, Pompeo told CNN the Iranian general was planning an “imminent” attack,
one that “would have put dozens if not hundreds of American lives at risk.”
On Wednesday, however,
Pompeo seemed to step back from that claim, citing Soleimani’s history of
attacks on Americans as justification for the attack. On Thursday, he seemed to
retreat even further, telling Fox News that “we don’t know precisely when and
we don’t know precisely where, but it was real.”
During Friday’s sanctions
news conference at the White House, Pompeo was asked for his definition of
“imminent,” and responded: “This was gonna happen, and American lives were at
risk.”
Democrats in Congress have
raised questions about Pompeo’s assertions, and Trump’s national security team
did not present evidence of an imminent threat during a classified briefing on
Wednesday.
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