A missile is launched during the annual military drill, dubbed “Zolphaghar 99”, in the Gulf of Oman with the participation of Navy, Air and Ground forces, Iran on September 9, 2020. Wana
A missile is launched during the annual military drill, dubbed “Zolphaghar 99”, in the Gulf of Oman with the participation of Navy, Air and Ground forces, Iran on September 9, 2020. Wana
A missile is launched during the annual military drill, dubbed “Zolphaghar 99”, in the Gulf of Oman with the participation of Navy, Air and Ground forces, Iran on September 9, 2020. Wana
A missile is launched during the annual military drill, dubbed “Zolphaghar 99”, in the Gulf of Oman with the participation of Navy, Air and Ground forces, Iran on September 9, 2020. Wana

US to sanction dozens tied to Iran's arms and nuclear programmes


  • English
  • Arabic

The United States on Monday will sanction more than two dozen people and entities involved in Iran's nuclear, missile and conventional arms programmes, a senior US official said, putting teeth behind UN sanctions on Tehran that Washington argues have resumed despite the opposition of allies and adversaries.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the official told Reuters that Iran could have enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon by the end of the year and that Tehran has resumed long-range missile co-operation with nuclear-armed North Korea. He did not provide detailed evidence regarding either assertion.

The new sanctions fit into US President Donald Trump's effort to limit Iran's regional influence and come a week after US-brokered deals for the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain to normalise ties with Israel, pacts that may coalesce a wider coalition against Iran while appealing to pro-Israel US voters before the November 3 election.

The new sanctions also put European allies, China and Russia on notice that while their inclination may be to ignore the US drive to maintain the UN sanctions on Iran, companies based in their nations would feel the bite for violating them.

  • Iranian soldiers during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a three-day exercise. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    Iranian soldiers during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a three-day exercise. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • Iranian soldiers during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a three-day exercise. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    Iranian soldiers during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a three-day exercise. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • Iranian soldiers during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a three-day exercise. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    Iranian soldiers during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a three-day exercise. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • Iranian soldiers during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a three-day exercise. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    Iranian soldiers during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a three-day exercise. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • An Iranian tank exiting from a navy warship during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    An Iranian tank exiting from a navy warship during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • An Iranian helicopter during a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    An Iranian helicopter during a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. Reuters, HO via Iranian Army website
    Iranian rockets being fired during a military exercise in the Gulf, near the strategic strait of Hormuz in southern Iran during a drill. Reuters, HO via Iranian Army website
  • An Iranian Simorgh drone carrying a weapon during the second day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    An Iranian Simorgh drone carrying a weapon during the second day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • An Iranian Ghader missile before its launch during the second day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    An Iranian Ghader missile before its launch during the second day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • An Iranian missile Ghader before firing during the second day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    An Iranian missile Ghader before firing during the second day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • An Iranian army helicopter landing on a navy warship during the last day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    An Iranian army helicopter landing on a navy warship during the last day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • An Iranian army helicopter landing on a navy warship during the last day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
    An Iranian army helicopter landing on a navy warship during the last day of a military exercise in the Gulf. AFP, HO via Iranian Army website
  • Iranian navy warships parade during the last day of military exercise in Gulf. EPA, HO Iranian military
    Iranian navy warships parade during the last day of military exercise in Gulf. EPA, HO Iranian military
  • Iranian navy warships parade during the last day of military exercise in Gulf. EPA, HO Iranian military
    Iranian navy warships parade during the last day of military exercise in Gulf. EPA, HO Iranian military

A major part of the new US push is an executive order targeting those who buy or sell Iran conventional arms that was previously reported by Reuters and will also be unveiled by the Trump administration on Monday, the official said.

The Trump administration suspects Iran of seeking nuclear weapons – something Tehran denies – and Monday's punitive steps are the latest in a series seeking to stymie Iran's atomic programme, which US ally Israel views as an existential threat.

"Iran is clearly doing everything it can to keep in existence a virtual turnkey capability to get back into the weaponisation business at a moment's notice should it choose to do so," the US official told Reuters.

The official argued Iran wants a nuclear weapons capability and the means to deliver it despite the 2015 deal that sought to prevent this by restraining Iran's atomic programme in return for access to the world market.

In May 2018, Mr Trump abandoned that agreement to the dismay of the other parties – Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia – and restored US sanctions that have crippled Iran's economy.

Iran, in turn, has gradually breached the central limits in that deal, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), including on the size of its stockpile of low-enriched uranium as well as the level of purity to which it was allowed to enrich uranium.

"Because of Iran's provocative nuclear escalation, it could have sufficient fissile material for a nuclear weapon by the end of this year," the official said without elaborating except to say this was based on "the totality" of information available to the United States, including from the IAEA.

The Vienna-based agency has said Iran only began significantly breaching the 2015 deal's limits after the US withdrawal and it is still enriching uranium only up to 4.5 per cent, well below the 20 per cent it had achieved before that agreement, let alone the roughly 90 per cent purity that is considered weapons-grade, suitable for an atom bomb.

"Iran and North Korea have resumed co-operation on a long-range missile project, including the transfer of critical parts," he added, declining to say when such joint work first began, stopped, and then started again.

Asked to comment on the impending new US sanctions and the US official's other statements, a spokesman for Iran's mission to the United Nations dismissed them as propaganda and said they would further isolate the United States.

"The US' 'maximum pressure' show, which includes new propaganda measures almost every week, has clearly failed miserably, and announcing new measures will not change this fact," the mission's spokesman, Alireza Miryousefi, told Reuters in an email.

"The entire world understands that these are a part of [the] next US election campaign, and they are ignoring the US' preposterous claims at the UN today. It will only make [the] US more isolated in world affairs," he said.

The White House declined to comment in advance of Monday's announcements.

'Snap back' of UN sanctions?

A man walks past a mural painted on the outer walls of the former US embassy in the Iranian capital Tehran on September 20, 2020. AFP
A man walks past a mural painted on the outer walls of the former US embassy in the Iranian capital Tehran on September 20, 2020. AFP

The US official confirmed Mr Trump will issue an executive order that would allow the United States to punish those who buy or sell conventional arms to Iran with secondary sanctions, depriving them of access to the US market.

The proximate cause for this US action is the impending expiration of a UN arms embargo on Iran and to warn foreign actors – US entities are already barred from such trade – that if they buy or sell arms to Iran they will face US sanctions.

Under the 2015 nuclear deal, the UN conventional arms embargo is set to expire on October 18.

The United States says it has triggered a "snap back," or resumption, of virtually all UN sanctions on Iran, including the arms embargo, to come into effect at 8pm on Saturday.

Other parties to the nuclear deal and most UN Security Council members have said they do not believe the United States has the right to reimpose the UN sanctions and that the US move has no legal effect.

On Friday, Britain, France and Germany told the Security Council that UN sanctions relief for Iran – agreed under the 2015 nuclear deal – would continue beyond Sunday, despite Washington's assertion.

In letters to the Security Council on Saturday, China's UN Ambassador Zhang Jun and Russia's UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia both described the US move as "illegitimate" and said the UN sanctions relief for Iran would continue.

Secretary-General Antonio Guterres says the United Nations will not support reimposing sanctions on Iran as the United States is demanding until he gets a green light from the Security Council.

The UN chief said in a letter to the council president obtained Sunday by The Associated Press that "there would appear to be uncertainty" on whether or not US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo triggered the "snapback" mechanism in the Security Council resolution that enshrined the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and six major powers.

Targets include Iran's nuclear, missile, arms groups

The new executive order will define conventional weapons broadly as any item with a potential military use, meaning it could cover such things as speed boats that Iran retrofits to harass vessels in international waters, the US official told Reuters.

It would also apply to conventional circuit boards that can be used in ballistic missile guidance systems, he added.

The more than two dozen targets to be hit with sanctions on Monday include those involved in Iran's conventional arms, nuclear and missile programmes, the official said, saying some of the targets are already sanctioned under other US programmes.

That could prompt criticism that the US move is redundant and designed for public relations purposes to look tough on Iran, a charge critics have made about past US sanctions actions.

Among the targets will be Iran's "most nefarious arms organisations," about a dozen senior officials, scientists and experts from Iran's nuclear complex, members of a procurement network that supplies military-grade dual-use goods for Iran's missile programme, and several senior officials involved in Iran's ballistic missile programme, the US official said.

The official declined to name the targets, saying this would be made public on Monday, and stressed that the United States wants to deter foreign companies from dealing with them even if their governments believe this is legally permitted.

"You might have a split in some countries where a foreign government may claim that the UN sanctions don't snap back but their banks and companies will abide by US sanctions because they want to make sure they are not a future target," he said.

First Person
Richard Flanagan
Chatto & Windus 

Dubai Bling season three

Cast: Loujain Adada, Zeina Khoury, Farhana Bodi, Ebraheem Al Samadi, Mona Kattan, and couples Safa & Fahad Siddiqui and DJ Bliss & Danya Mohammed 

Rating: 1/5

Kanguva
Director: Siva
Stars: Suriya, Bobby Deol, Disha Patani, Yogi Babu, Redin Kingsley
Rating: 2/5
 
Our family matters legal consultant

Name: Hassan Mohsen Elhais

Position: legal consultant with Al Rowaad Advocates and Legal Consultants.

Low turnout
Two months before the first round on April 10, the appetite of voters for the election is low.

Mathieu Gallard, account manager with Ipsos, which conducted the most recent poll, said current forecasts suggested only two-thirds were "very likely" to vote in the first round, compared with a 78 per cent turnout in the 2017 presidential elections.

"It depends on how interesting the campaign is on their main concerns," he told The National. "Just now, it's hard to say who, between Macron and the candidates of the right, would be most affected by a low turnout."

Company profile

Company: Eighty6 

Date started: October 2021 

Founders: Abdul Kader Saadi and Anwar Nusseibeh 

Based: Dubai, UAE 

Sector: Hospitality 

Size: 25 employees 

Funding stage: Pre-series A 

Investment: $1 million 

Investors: Seed funding, angel investors  

Bareilly Ki Barfi
Directed by: Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari
Starring: Kriti Sanon, Ayushmann Khurrana, Rajkummar Rao
Three and a half stars

Know your cyber adversaries

Cryptojacking: Compromises a device or network to mine cryptocurrencies without an organisation's knowledge.

Distributed denial-of-service: Floods systems, servers or networks with information, effectively blocking them.

Man-in-the-middle attack: Intercepts two-way communication to obtain information, spy on participants or alter the outcome.

Malware: Installs itself in a network when a user clicks on a compromised link or email attachment.

Phishing: Aims to secure personal information, such as passwords and credit card numbers.

Ransomware: Encrypts user data, denying access and demands a payment to decrypt it.

Spyware: Collects information without the user's knowledge, which is then passed on to bad actors.

Trojans: Create a backdoor into systems, which becomes a point of entry for an attack.

Viruses: Infect applications in a system and replicate themselves as they go, just like their biological counterparts.

Worms: Send copies of themselves to other users or contacts. They don't attack the system, but they overload it.

Zero-day exploit: Exploits a vulnerability in software before a fix is found.

The National Archives, Abu Dhabi

Founded over 50 years ago, the National Archives collects valuable historical material relating to the UAE, and is the oldest and richest archive relating to the Arabian Gulf.

Much of the material can be viewed on line at the Arabian Gulf Digital Archive - https://www.agda.ae/en

Stree

Producer: Maddock Films, Jio Movies
Director: Amar Kaushik
Cast: Rajkummar Rao, Shraddha Kapoor, Pankaj Tripathi, Aparshakti Khurana, Abhishek Banerjee
Rating: 3.5

Recipe

Garlicky shrimp in olive oil
Gambas Al Ajillo

Preparation time: 5 to 10 minutes

Cooking time: 5 minutes

Serves 4

Ingredients

180ml extra virgin olive oil; 4 to 5 large cloves of garlic, minced or pureed (or 3 to 4 garlic scapes, roughly chopped); 1 or 2 small hot red chillies, dried (or ¼ teaspoon dried red chilli flakes); 400g raw prawns, deveined, heads removed and tails left intact; a generous splash of sweet chilli vinegar; sea salt flakes for seasoning; a small handful of fresh flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped

Method

Heat the oil in a terracotta dish or frying pan. Once the oil is sizzling hot, add the garlic and chilli, stirring continuously for about 10 seconds until golden and aromatic.

Add a splash of sweet chilli vinegar and as it vigorously simmers, releasing perfumed aromas, add the prawns and cook, stirring a few times.

Once the prawns turn pink, after 1 or 2 minutes of cooking,  remove from the heat and season with sea salt flakes.

Once the prawns are cool enough to eat, scatter with parsley and serve with small forks or toothpicks as the perfect sharing starter. Finish off with crusty bread to soak up all that flavour-infused olive oil.

 

Past winners of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix

2016 Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes-GP)

2015 Nico Rosberg (Mercedes-GP)

2014 Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes-GP)

2013 Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing)

2012 Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus)

2011 Lewis Hamilton (McLaren)

2010 Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing)

2009 Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing)

 

Our legal columnist

Name: Yousef Al Bahar

Advocate at Al Bahar & Associate Advocates and Legal Consultants, established in 1994

Education: Mr Al Bahar was born in 1979 and graduated in 2008 from the Judicial Institute. He took after his father, who was one of the first Emirati lawyers

From Zero

Artist: Linkin Park

Label: Warner Records

Number of tracks: 11

Rating: 4/5

'Nightmare Alley'

Director:Guillermo del Toro

Stars:Bradley Cooper, Cate Blanchett, Rooney Mara

Rating: 3/5

Classification of skills

A worker is categorised as skilled by the MOHRE based on nine levels given in the International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO) issued by the International Labour Organisation. 

A skilled worker would be someone at a professional level (levels 1 – 5) which includes managers, professionals, technicians and associate professionals, clerical support workers, and service and sales workers.

The worker must also have an attested educational certificate higher than secondary or an equivalent certification, and earn a monthly salary of at least Dh4,000. 

World Cup warm up matches

May 24 Pakistan v Afghanistan, Bristol; Sri Lanka v South Africa, Cardiff

May 25 England v Australia, Southampton; India v New Zealand, The Oval

May 26 South Africa v West Indies, Bristol; Pakistan v Bangladesh, Cardiff

May 27 Australia v Sri Lanka, Southampton; England v Afghanistan, The Oval

May 28 West Indies v New Zealand, Bristol; Bangladesh v India, Cardiff

Dust and sand storms compared

Sand storm

  • Particle size: Larger, heavier sand grains
  • Visibility: Often dramatic with thick "walls" of sand
  • Duration: Short-lived, typically localised
  • Travel distance: Limited 
  • Source: Open desert areas with strong winds

Dust storm

  • Particle size: Much finer, lightweight particles
  • Visibility: Hazy skies but less intense
  • Duration: Can linger for days
  • Travel distance: Long-range, up to thousands of kilometres
  • Source: Can be carried from distant regions
Venom

Director: Ruben Fleischer

Cast: Tom Hardy, Michelle Williams, Riz Ahmed

Rating: 1.5/5

Score

Third Test, Day 2

New Zealand 274
Pakistan 139-3 (61 ov)

Pakistan trail by 135 runs with 7 wickets remaining in the innings

Company profile

Name: The Concept

Founders: Yadhushan Mahendran, Maria Sobh and Muhammad Rijal

Based: Abu Dhabi

Founded: 2017

Number of employees: 7

Sector: Aviation and space industry

Funding: $250,000

Future plans: Looking to raise $1 million investment to boost expansion and develop new products