
US hits Iran with ‘massive' new sanctions
The sanctions, announced on Wednesday, target more than 100 individuals, companies, and vessels that the US Treasury described as part of a 'vast shipping empire' run by trader Mohammad Hossein Shamkhani, the son of Ali Shamkhani, a senior adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
The Treasury accused Shamkhani of using his father's influence to build a fleet of tankers and container ships moving billions of dollars' worth of oil and petroleum products from Iran and Russia to buyers worldwide, including China, allegedly illegally and through layers of 'front' companies. It accused the network of 'evading sanctions, laundering money, and obfuscating paper trails.' The sanctioned include 12 individuals – among them a French, a UK, and an Italian national – as well as 52 vessels and 15 shipping companies, including one based in Switzerland.
'The Shamkhani family's shipping empire highlights how the Iranian regime elites leverage their positions to accrue massive wealth and fund the regime's dangerous behavior,' Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said. 'These actions put America first by targeting regime elites that profit while Tehran threatens the safety of the US.'
The sanctions, dubbed the most 'massive' Iran-related package since 2018, are part of President Donald Trump's renewed 'maximum pressure' strategy to end Iran's uranium enrichment program. They also follow recent US-Israeli strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan.
Tehran denounced the sanctions as unlawful. Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei on Thursday called them a clear sign of 'the hostility of American policymakers towards the Iranian people,' claiming their real aim was to cripple Iran's development.
Iran's uranium enrichment activities have long been seen by the West as a secret attempt to develop atomic weapons.
Iran has repeatedly denied this, insisting its nuclear activities are solely for peaceful purposes. It also warned it would not bow to Washington's demands under pressure, denouncing the sanctions as acts of threat and intimidation.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Russia Today
3 hours ago
- Russia Today
Ukrainian attack kills woman near Europe's largest nuclear power plant
A Ukrainian drone and artillery strike killed a civilian woman and injured a man near Europe's largest nuclear power plant, according to regional authorities and plant officials in Energodar, in Russia's Zaporozhye Region. The Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) was brought under Russian control in March 2022, shortly after which the region's residents voted in a referendum to join Russia. Around the same time, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) deployed a monitoring mission to the ZNPP, which has remained on-site to this day. The attack on Saturday morning targeted an auxiliary facility located in the industrial zone of Energodar, just 1,200 meters from the perimeter of the ZNPP. According to the facility's operator, the incident led to a fire that engulfed a civilian vehicle unrelated to the plant's operations. 'To our deep regret, a deceased civilian was found inside the vehicle,' the plant operator reported via Telegram. Plant officials stressed that there was no threat to the nuclear reactors' safety. Firefighters attempting to extinguish the blaze were also targeted by a Ukrainian drone, although no casualties were reported among the emergency crews. The mayor of Energodar, Maksim Pukhov, warned residents not to approach the site due to 'a high risk of repeated attacks,' adding that Ukrainian UAVs were severely hampering rescue and investigative efforts. The IAEA monitoring team confirmed hearing explosions and seeing smoke rising from the direction of the auxiliary site. 'Any attack in the vicinity of a nuclear power plant – regardless of the intended target – poses potential risks also for nuclear safety and must be avoided,' said IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi, who once again urged 'maximum military restraint near nuclear facilities.' The ZNPP has been repeatedly targeted by drone and artillery strikes in recent years. Russian officials have accused Kiev of committing 'nuclear terrorism' and warned that continued attacks near the facility could result in a catastrophic incident. In previous strikes, drones have hit areas near the reactor containment domes and the plant's training center.


Russia Today
6 hours ago
- Russia Today
Witkoff to visit Moscow on Sunday
US President Donald Trump's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, will visit Moscow on Sunday to try for a breakthrough in negotiations on the Ukrainian conflict, according to US Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker. Trump has also announced that Witkoff will travel to Russia, although he gave no specific timeline. The special envoy has previously met with Russian President Vladimir Putin on several occasions during past diplomatic TO FOLLOW


Russia Today
12 hours ago
- Russia Today
‘No defense against' Russia's Oreshnik missile – ex-Pentagon analyst
Neither Ukraine nor its Western backers have any means to counter Russia's newly deployed intermediate-range Oreshnik missile, Michael Maloof, a former senior Pentagon security analyst, told RT in an interview on Friday. Maloof noted that the Oreshnik could 'easily shift the balance of power overwhelmingly in favor' of Russia in any conflict, including the ongoing hostilities with Ukraine. 'Having a hypersonic [missile] for which there's no defense currently… is astonishing. It absolutely alters that balance of power dramatically, for which the Ukrainians have no defense,' he said. He noted that while the US is working to adapt missile defense systems such as THAAD to counter hypersonic threats, these programs remain under development. 'There's no operational ability at this point to deal with a hypersonic missile,' Maloof said, adding that the Oreshnik could reach its targets within mere minutes. The former analyst added that the missile also travels at a speed of over 7,000 miles (11,000km) an hour. 'There's no defense against that,' he said. The missile system, Maloof stated, has already been tested successfully in Ukraine in battlefield conditions. He was referring to a strike on Ukraine's Yuzhmash military industrial facility in the city of Dnepr in November 2024. Russian President Vladimir Putin said afterward that the missile's warheads flew at speeds exceeding Mach 10 and could not be intercepted by existing air defenses. The missile could also carry conventional and nuclear payloads and travel up to several thousand kilometers. According to Putin, the Oreshnik strike on Ukraine was a response to the country's decision to use Western-supplied long-range missiles for attacks deep into Russia. On Friday, the Russian president said that the first serially produced Oreshnik missile system had entered service with the armed forces. He also noted that the question of supplying the weapons to Belarus, Russia's key ally, will likely be resolved by the end of the year.