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    Iran warns of consequences if Arabs back oil sanctions

    TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran warned Gulf Arab neighbours on Sunday they would suffer consequences if they raised oil output to replace Iranian crude facing an international ban.

    In signs of Tehran's deepening isolation over its refusal to halt nuclear activity that could yield atomic bombs, China's premier was in Saudi Arabia probing for greater access to its huge oil and gas reserves and Britain voiced confidence a once hesitant European Union would soon ban oil imports from Iran.

    Major importers of Iranian oil were long loath to embargo the lifeblood of Iran's economy because of fears this would send oil prices rocketing at a time - amidst debt and deficit crises and high unemployment - when they could least afford it.

    But strong momentum for oil sanctions has been created by a U.N. watchdog report saying Iran appeared to have worked on designing an atom bomb.

    A new U.S. law signed by President Barack Obama on New Year's Eve would freeze out of the U.S. financial system any institution dealing with Iran's central bank - which processes its oil revenues.

    If fully applied, the law would make it impossible for most countries to buy Iranian oil. Washington is offering waivers to countries to let them keep buying Iranian oil for now, but demanding they gradually cut their imports back.

    Leaders from some of the Asian countries that buy the most Iranian oil have begun touring the Middle East to secure alternative supply lines from Arab states. European buyers suggest they will also lean more heavily on Arab oil producers should an EU ban come into effect.

    Feeling increasingly encircled, Iran's hardline Islamic clerical elite has lashed back by threatening to block the main Middle East oil shipping route. Since the New Year, Tehran also began to enrich uranium in an underground bunker and sentenced an Iranian-American citizen to death on espionage charges.

    Tensions in the Gulf have caused occasional spikes in oil prices in recent weeks. The sanctions are also having a real impact on Iran's domestic economy, causing prices of imported staples to soar and the rial currency to tumble.

    Iran holds a parliamentary election in March, its first since a presidential vote in 2009 led to eight months of street protests. Those demonstrations were put down by force, but since then the "Arab Spring" has shown the vulnerability of states in the region to public anger fuelled by economic hardship.

    IRAN WARNS GULF ARABS

    Iranian OPEC Governor Mohammad Ali Khatibi said Tehran would regard as an unfriendly act any move by neighbouring Gulf Arab oil exporters to make up for Iranian crude.

    "If (they) give the green light to replacing Iran's oil these countries would be the main culprits for whatever happens in the region - including the Strait of Hormuz," Khatibi told the Sharq daily newspaper, referring to the narrow sea channel through which a third of the world's oil tanker traffic passes.

    "Our Arab neighbour countries should not cooperate with these (U.S. and European) adventurers... These measures will not be perceived as friendly," he said.

    Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said on Saturday the world's No. 1 oil exporter - the only one in OPEC with significant unused capacity - was ready and able to meet any increase in demand. He made no direct reference to sanctions on Iran.

    Iran's navy commander Habibollah Sayyari said Tehran could exert control over the Strait of Hormuz. The United States, whose warships patrol the region, says it will not tolerate any attempt to disrupt shipping through the strait.

    Military experts say Iran could not challenge the huge U.S.-led fleet that guards the strait for long, but its threats raise the risk of miscalculation that could flare into a clash.

    The United States and Israel postponed military exercises scheduled to take place in coming weeks to later in the year. Officials in both countries denied the postponement was connected with the increasing tension over Iran.

    Oil prices were down at the end of last week as anticipation of downgrades by Standard & Poor's of several indebted euro zone economies countered the buoyant effect of anxiety about Iranian threats to shipping. But the standoff over Iran pointed to continued support for higher prices, brokers and analysts said.

    Iran's foreign ministry said on Sunday it had received a letter from Washington about the Strait of Hormuz and there was no decision yet on whether to reply. A ministry spokesman did not divulge the contents of the letter.

    Tehran had said on Saturday it had written to Washington with evidence the CIA was involved in the assassination of a nuclear scientist, blown up by a bomb attached to his car last week, the latest of several such killings.

    Western countries suspect Iran is trying to develop nuclear weapons capability. Iran says it is only interested in nuclear technology for peaceful purposes such as generating electricity.

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    Iran oil sales by country: http://link.reuters.com/pyw35s

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    CHINA SEEKS OIL OPTIONS IN GULF

    Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao was pressing Saudi Arabia to open its oil and gas wealth to more Chinese investment, Chinese media said on Sunday. China has been Iran's biggest oil buyer.

    Although Beijing opposes further international sanctions on Iran, it has already cut its purchases of Iranian oil by more than half for the first two months of this year.

    "China and Saudi Arabia are both in important stages of development and there are broad prospects for enhancing cooperation," Wen told Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Nayef on Saturday, according to Xinhua news agency.

    Michal Meidan, an analyst with London's Eurasia Group, said: "Beijing is concerned with the potential response to bellicose Iranian statements and the spike in oil prices that would ensue from greater turmoil in Syria and Iran."

    Wen was also scheduled to visit the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, two other big OPEC exporters across the Gulf from Iran.

    British Foreign Secretary William Hague said on Sunday he was "confident" the 27-member European Union would impose resounding sanctions on Iran's oil industry and possibly other sectors at an EU foreign ministers meeting on January 23.

    After protracted reluctance to act arising from the dependence of some debt-ridden EU economies on Iranian oil, member states have agreed in principle to ban it and have been working on details of how this will be implemented.

    Last year EU countries collectively bought about a fifth of Iranian exports, roughly on par with China.

    Any EU-wide prohibition of Iranian oil would probably take effect gradually. "Grace periods" on existing contracts of one to 12 months have been proposed to allow importers to find other suppliers before implementing an embargo.

    Hague said: "Our sanctions are part of trying to get Iran to change course and to enter negotiations and we should not be deterred from implementing those. We will continue to intensify our own sanctions and those of the European Union."

    IRANIAN DEFIANCE

    Some analysts say Iran's leadership, which has thrived on defiance of the West since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, is more likely to dig in rather than back off in response to sanctions aimed at stopping a nuclear programme many Iranians regard as a matter of national sovereignty and modernisation.

    A year after the collapse of the last big power talks with Iran, its deepening nuclear defiance has raised concern of war if harsher sanctions do not change its course.

    Israel, reputed to have the Middle East's only nuclear arsenal, sees Iran's nuclear and missile projects as a mortal threat which it will resort to force as a last resort to stop.

    The risk of Israel triggering Middle East upheaval with a unilateral strike has the war-weary United States worried.

    U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General Martin Dempsey is to make his first visit to Israel on Thursday. Israeli media say he will try to persuade his hosts not to "surprise" Washington on Iran.

    Israel's vice prime minister voiced disappointment that the new U.S. legislation gives Obama leeway to allow sanctions waivers to countries to keep buying Iranian crude.

    "The (U.S.) Senate passed a resolution, by a majority of 100-to-one, to impose these sanctions, and in the U.S. administration there is hesitation for fear of oil prices rising this year, out of election-year considerations," Moshe Yaalon told Israel Radio.

    Obama has said he is determined to deny Tehran the means to develop an atom bomb. His aides cast their sanctions strategy as a bid to work collaboratively with foreign powers and win over states that import Iranian oil without shocking energy markets.

    (Additional reporting by Robin Pomeroy in Tehran, Daniel Fineren in London, Dan Williams in Jerusalem, Adrian Croft in London, Chris Buckley in Beijing; Writing by Mark Heinrich; Editing by Peter Graff)

     

    66 comments

    • PixieW  •  Birmingham, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      yet more fighting, yet more debt, yet more hikes in petrol prices and for what? the victims in all this isnt us its the soldiers and civilians that get killed in the political madness we should really feel for.
    • Dave  •  Reading, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      Vey interesting that China maybe willing to reduce its oil imports from Iran. Wonder if that includes gas to?

      The Iranian economy is pretty dependent on Chinese investment, it will hit them fairly hard if it actually happens.

      The other thing to consider is the Chinese economy is about to melt down - house prices are collapsing, the first sign of that, so some real problems ahead there. Will be interesting to see how they deal with it.
    • jack  •  Manchester, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      oil and religion, the bane of mans existance.
    • barry  •  1 month 8 days ago
      oh, I see. Now Iran can tell everyone in the Gulf what they can and can't do. If Saudi Arabia, the UAE, etc.. pump more of their own oil - will Iran nuke them ??
      Talk about the USA being a bully ?
    • GOPHAR CORFE  •  1 month 8 days ago
      don't you just love it, brother arabs, sharing a common faith, threatening one another over oil, same would happen if blue circle ran out of sand
    • Stiff Lower Lip  •  1 month 8 days ago
      This should get interesting.
      If the Iranians try anything silly the U.S. will wipe out their navy.
    • dunc  •  Bradford, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      Here we go!......."ten quid a gallon over the horizon.
    • Alex  •  Maidenhead, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      We have to stand against our government not to send our brothers and families in any US war.IRAN war is building up and the US is going all out to get us on board,so are we going to loose our brothers and family this year .we need to stand up for this
    • bob  •  1 month 8 days ago
      The US view dictatorships with nuclear capability as a threat to world peace, yet they only take action if oil is part of the equation.
    • Dave  •  Reading, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      I wonder how close to total collapse the Iranian economy is? Confidence in their own currency is pretty much finished with the Iranians all buying dollars instead.

      I think it mostly depends on a few countries like China, Japan, Greece etc if they really do significantly reduce their trade with Iran I cant see that the Iranians then have much of a way out of meltdown.

      Usually its the crashing house prices / rapid inflation / rapidly rising unemployment that can give early signs of a meltdown, unfortunate for the Iranian people if that happens.

      I dont think Iran will have an 'Arab Spring' revolution though; I just cant see that working there for several reasons.
    • uhtred  •  1 month 7 days ago
      muslims...ANY muslims...ALL muslims are just TROUBLE waiting to start...bigger threat to the west there has EVER been...makes hitler&his armies seem like the boy scouts...
      THERE WILL BE BLOOD...
    • Amata Yogi  •  Brighton, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      Iran now telling it's neighbours the dos & dont's. This is just the beginning, what happens when Ayatollah gets the bomb?
    • Arash  •  London, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      If there were meeting of minds and unity of actions, this would not have got to where it is now! Sadly, a number of Arab fatbum good for nothing such as the dictator in Qatar and the King of Saudi Arabia who can’t trust the female population to drive in their own country, continue to be the platform of USA & Co in the Middle East, to safeguard their interests and earn credit points for when they are kicked out their country, as it happened to Shah of Iran, they could seek sanctuary in the west.
    • Kashif N  •  Karachi, Pakistan  •  1 month 7 days ago
      I'm afraid, this is not going to stop here, if US continue to put more sanctions on Iran it will affect the whole region including Pakistan and India and the Gas Pipeline Project, affecting both the economies, thus affecting war on Terror on the other hand.
    • Pasakka  •  Düsseldorf, Germany  •  1 month 8 days ago
      nothing new on this article. Read it a while ago.
    • Railman  •  Brighton, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      John ...bad news I'm afraid.........North Sea oil IS running out,they are having to pump sludge down now to get the last dregs out. 5 yrs left at the most (if your very ,very lucky).
      So.....Scotland get independence.....Scotland borrows Billions off their old friends the French ( substitute EU for France).........Scotland goes tits up.....Scotland begs to come back into UK,when it can't pay it's debts (expects us to pay).
    • pete  •  Hull, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      The sooner Iran is nuked, the better. Wipe them off the face of the earth!!
    • B  •  1 month 8 days ago
      The Iranian people are being terrorized by their Governemnt. The Iranian people are Muslim. But Muslim people here aren't sympathetic to the people of Iran, although they seem very happy with the dictator Armindinnerjacket. Are the Iranian democrats the wrong kind of Muslim?
    • John  •  Glasgow, Scotland  •  1 month 8 days ago
      All those countries could source Scotland's north sea oil. Then Scotland could become independent. ....until it's oil runs out in a week.
    • TANDY  •  Swindon, England  •  1 month 8 days ago
      Once all of Iran's oil is gone they can make up the lost profits by offering adventure holidays and sight seeing. Thats if their leaders don't nuke themselves first ! I mean, they don't even have IPAD 2's so surely they could have just stopped developing a weapon to kill people and give their people a bit of western fun. I mean, have you heard their top 10 ? It's like someone is strangling a cat.....literally !

      I guess this is what you get with a Muslim with a load of money and nothing better to do.....Preach death, question everything western, support terrorists groups, buy a new burkha for the missus, contemplate world domination, contemplate killing the infidels, buy some nukes, threaten death to everyone, demand everyone respect your "Godly" actions, die and go to hell. Glad I'm not religious, I can't go to hell !

      T