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House votes to expand sanctions on Iran

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The House voted today to impose new economic sanctions on Iran as lawmakers cast doubt on that country’s willingness to respond to diplomatic efforts to curtail its purported nuclear arms program.

The legislation, approved 412-12, would end access to U.S. markets for foreign companies selling refined petroleum products to Iran or helping that country develop its petroleum capacity. While Iran is a major crude oil producer, its lack of ability to produce enough gasoline and other refined petroleum products is a major economic vulnerability.

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With no Senate action on the legislation expected this year, the House vote was for the time being mainly a warning that the United States is ready to act on its own if the Tehran government doesn’t respond to current international efforts to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear power.

The bill drew opposition from lawmakers who said it would mainly cause hardship among poor and middle-class Iranians.

Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg, in a letter to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last week, said the Obama administration was “entering a critical period of intense diplomacy to impose significant international pressure on Iran.” Sanctions legislation “might weaken rather than strengthen international unity and support for our efforts,” Steinberg’s letter said.

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Howard L. Berman (D-Valley Village), said Iran has had ample time to respond to President Obama’s efforts at engagement: “President Obama has offered Iran an outstretched hand, but regrettably, Iran has not unclenched its fist.”

U.S. officials say Iran has already stockpiled enough uranium to produce one nuclear weapon, said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida, top Republican on the Foreign Affairs Committee. International diplomacy has proved to be a mirage, she said, adding that “we must use the limited time remaining to impose sanctions so painful that they should threaten the Iranian regime’s survival.”

Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), a leading critic of the bill, said it would antagonize the many Iranian people who oppose the government of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. “We’re telling the Iranian people, ‘we have feelings of friendship for you. we like you so much, but we’re going to cut off your home heating oil,’” he said.

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“This will unify the Iranian people against us,” said Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas).

U.S. petroleum exports to Iran are already banned under past sanctions. But the National Foreign Trade Council and its affiliate, USA Engage, expressed concern that a U.S. company that has business dealings with a foreign firm involved in Iran’s energy sector could face sanctions.

-- Associated Press

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