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U.S. Treasury sanctions Iran’s rocket fuel supply chain

(LhcCoutinho / Pixabay)

By The Maritime Executive

The U.S. Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) has sanctioned the procurement network that helps Iran’s military import rocket fuel ingredients from China, an essential logistics arrangement for the Iranian ballistic missile program. 

The import scheme first came into public view in January, when intelligence sources tipped off the Financial Times to two Iranian ships that were loading chemical ingredients for ballistic missile propellant off Shanghai. The boxships Golbon and Jairan, owned and operated by the sanctioned Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL), were believed to be carrying about five dozen containers of Chinese-made sodium perchlorate. The substance is a precursor for ammonium perchlorate, the main ingredient in the solid rocket propellant that is used by Iran’s prolific missile industry. Before it could be used, the consignment detonated in storage at the port of Bandar Abbas under unclear circumstances, killing dozens and injuring more than 1,000 people.

Part of Iran’s international rocket fuel supply network is centered around a small, three-person business called the “MVM partnership,” according to the U.S. Treasury. For the last two years, this network has arranged for the international procurement of sodium chlorate, sodium perchlorate, and sebacic acid – all useful for making rocket propellant – for Iran’s Parchin Chemical Industries (PCI). PCI is under an asset freeze imposed by the UN Security Council, and has been sanctioned by the U.S. for the last 17 years. 

Read more at The Maritime Executive

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