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Sanctions dodge: India to pay gold for Iran oil, China may follow

Published time: January 24, 2012 08:53
Edited time: January 25, 2012 07:03
Oil-for-gold: Tehran’s metal shield from sanctions
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India has reportedly agreed to pay Tehran in gold for the oil it buys, in a move aimed at protecting Delhi from US-sanctions targeting countries who trade with Iran. China, another buyer of Iranian oil, may follow Delhi’s lead.

The report, by the Israeli-based news website DEBKAfile, states that Iran and India are negotiating backup alternatives with China and Russia, should the US and EU find a way to block the gold payment mechanism.

Delhi’s move is seen as surprising, as earlier India and Iran said they would switch to yen and rupees. China, another major importer of Iranian oil, may follow Delhi’s lead, the report adds.

India and China need to switch from the dollar in bilateral trade, since the US and EU have issued unilateral sanctions against the Iranian oil industry and financial institutions. The sanctions would ban any bank involved in oil trade with Iran from dealing with American and European counterparts.

Both India and China, two major buyers of Iranian oil accounting for 22 and 13 percent of its total export respectively, have refused to join such sanctions. This means they have to establish a reliable way of paying for crude, independently of the parts of the global financial system controlled by New York and London.

Delhi’s current plan is to effect payments through two state-owned banks, India’s UCO Bank and Turkey’s Halk Bankasi, Turkey being another country refusing to join the sanction spree.

The US issued sanctions against Iran in December, aiming to put pressure on the Islamic Republic and make its controversial nuclear program more transparent. The EU joined the initiative on Monday, banning new oil contracts with Iran, but allowing current ones to be fulfilled.

Australia on Tuesday became the latest country to voice plans for such an embargo, although the move would be more symbolic than practical, considering the country’s small share in Iran’s oil export.

Japan and South Korea, two other major buyers of Iranian crude, are in talks with Washington over the issue, although both Seoul and Tokyo are worried that stopping their imports could hurt their economies.

Iran, which is highly dependent on its sales of oil, is reacting to the sanction campaign nervously. Tehran says it will not yield to pressure, and threatens to block the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil tanker route in the Persian Gulf.

­German political analyst Christoph R. Horstel told RT that amid the economic crisis the embargo on Iranian oil imports could backfire on the EU, while Iran “will do quite well even under the embargo.”

“All the present faithful customers to Iran oil are set to continue buying this oil, and they will find a way, rest assured,” he said. “This is the signal I get from Tehran.”

“I was personally present when the deputy economics minister of Iran was talking to a foreign society in Berlin,” he added. “And the gentleman said very openly to the shocked audience ‘OK. You don’t want to buy our goods. Well, the Chinese do.”

Watch RT's full interview with Christoph R. Horstel


­Neil Padukone from the Takshashila, an independent Indian think tank, told RT that countries like China, Russia and India are now looking for other creative ways to engage with Iran while insulating themselves from punitive actions from the United States. “And some of these actions include paying in gold rather than dollars and also building new, independent corporate entities that don’t even participate in Western markets.”

Watch RT's full interview with Neil Padukone


Comments (139)

gary (unregistered) 19.03.2012 03:23


Without knowing the full picture it is difficult to understand as to why India has changed its mind and go against US and EU. Firstly India needs oil desperately for its growing economy. Both EU and US failed to take that into consideration. Saudi Arabia is not increasing its production to fill the gap. Secondly, India was recently marginalized in its role in afghanistan in a meeting with NATO. India for its security reasons needs to be a part in Afghanistan discussion so that Taliban does not take over Afghanistan. This would be very detrimental for India (and for USA too). Right after the NATO meeting India reopened its alliances with old friend Russia. Now it is trying to work out an alliance with Russia and Iran to prevent Taliban from taking over Afghanistan. Pakistan on the other hand is trying to broker an agreement with Taliban in Afghanistan. This is a regional politics which most Americans do not understand. US was very short sighted in putting embargo on Iran without taking these countries into confidence. USA succumbed to the Israeli lobby.

+1

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brianmoloney 16.03.2012 22:44

Gold Bug wrote in #1
Wow, the rupee must be a real garbage currency for Iran to insist on payment in gold, instead. WOW you SURE dont have a clue do you. INDIA is a VERY wealthy country. They export a LOT especially to North America. I guess India should be very GRATEFULL to the USA especially to WALL STREET.. They GOT ALL those JOBS that the USA EXPORTED to them. CHEAP LABOUR . India is a FAST growing ECONOMY yes a lot live in poverty. Capitalisim at its best cheap labour the people get paid pennies. The OLIGARCHS in India make all the money. Just like in the USA but not as bad as  in INDIA. The growing ECONOMIES are the BRIC. and the I stands for INDIA

+1

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AJ (unregistered) 29.02.2012 23:27

ukiceman wrote in #18
fs wrote in #7
Will the US and NATO now try to effect regime change in China and India? That's more or less what they have until now systematically done with every nation that has departed from the US dollar (or gone for the gold standard).
Good Point, i'd like to see the US take China on, that would be interesting! My money is on China. I'm from the UK and i'm with Iran on this one, what the hell has it got to do with the US and the EU, what they do with their oil .... nothing

The US could defeat China in a toe to toe shooting war, but  the US would be completely wrecked financially and in terms of morale by the time it was over.

+6

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View all comments (139)
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