The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has imposed sanctions on five entities and two individuals from Iran, China, Hong Kong, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) due to their involvement in procuring sensitive components for Iran’s one-way attack unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) program. This network has facilitated shipments and financial transactions to support the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Aerospace Force Self Sufficiency Jihad Organization (IRGC ASF SSJO) in acquiring servomotors, a crucial component used in Iran’s Shahed-series UAVs.
The significance of these sanctions is heightened by the fact that Iran has been supplying Russia with Shahed-136 UAVs, which are then used in Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine. One of the servomotors procured by the network designated by OFAC was discovered in the wreckage of a Russia-operated Shahed-136 that was recently shot down in Ukraine.
These sanctions are aimed at holding accountable those who contribute to Iran’s proliferation of UAVs to Russia and other destabilizing actors in the Middle East. The U.S. is acting in coordination with its allies and partners to address this issue. OFAC has been issuing sanctions related to Iran’s UAV program since September 2022, and this latest action builds on these measures.
Entities and individuals, including Pishgam Electronic Safeh Company (PESC) and Hongkong Himark Electron Model Limited, among others, have been targeted for their roles in these activities. Additionally, financial and logistical facilitators based in Turkey and the UAE, such as Dal Enerji Madencilik Turizm Sanayi Ve Ticaret Anonim Sirketi, Anka Port Ic Ve Dis Ticaret INSAAT Lojistik Sanayi Limited Sirketi, and Farhad Ghaedi Goods Wholesalers LLC, have also been sanctioned.
The sanctions impose restrictions on property and interests in property held by these individuals and entities in the United States, and transactions with them by U.S. persons or within the United States are prohibited. Foreign financial institutions that knowingly facilitate significant transactions for the designated individuals or entities may also face U.S. sanctions. OFAC maintains the option to remove individuals or entities from the sanctions list in accordance with the law if there is a positive change in their behavior.
By FCCT Editorial Team freeslots dinogame telegram营销