Latest News

Iraqi oil minister: Iranian oil tankers are using fake Iraqi documents

Hayan Abdel Ghani, Iraq's Oil Minister, has claimed that Iranian oil tanks seized by U.S. troops in the Gulf used forged Iraqi documentation.

The Trump administration has re-instituted "maximum" pressure on Iran. This is a new policy that seeks a way to isolate Iran from the global economic system and to eliminate its oil revenue to slow down Tehran's nuclear weapons development.

Abdel-Ghani, was asked whether he received any messages from the United States regarding the possibility of sanctions being imposed on the state oil marketing company SOMO for violating Iranian sanctions.

The oil minister told state television that he had received verbal inquiries regarding oil tankers detained by U.S. forces in the Gulf with Iraqi shipping manifests. He added that there was no formal written communication.

"It turned our that these tanks were Iranian... and they were using fake Iraqi documents." "We explained it to the authorities in full transparency, and they confirmed that."

The Iranian Oil Ministry did not respond immediately to a comment request.

Iran sees Iraq, its neighbour and ally, as essential to keeping its economy afloat under sanctions. Baghdad is wary about being in the crosshairs when Trump's Iran policy comes into play, according to sources.

In December, it was reported that an advanced fuel oil smuggling ring that generates at least one billion dollars a year in revenue for Iran and its proxy states has thrived in Iraq over the last few years. This network is believed to have flourished by using fake documents.

Abdel-Ghani stated that SOMO only sells crude to refineries that are owned by companies and not trading firms.

He said that SOMO operated with transparency and had committed no wrongdoings in the oil-export process. Ahmed Rasheed, Yousef SABA, Bernadette B. Baum, Kirsten D. Donovan, Editors

(source: Reuters)