A US official announced that Washington has moved to let Iraq pay Iran for electricity via non-Iraqi banks.
Iraq owes billions of dollars to Iran for importing gas and electricity which has continued despite US sanctions, but Tehran has been unable to obtain its assets frozen in Iraqi banks under US pressure.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken signed a 120-day national security waiver allowing Iraq heavily dependent on Iranian electricity to deposit such payments into non-Iraqi banks in third countries instead of into restricted accounts in Iraq, said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Monies put into non-Iraqi accounts, like those deposited into Iraqi banks, will also be restricted, still requiring US permission for Iran to get access to them and only for spending on humanitarian goods.
The latest waiver was expanded to permit payments to banks outside Iraq at the request of the Iraqi government, apparently in the hopes that this might transfer some of the pressure that Iran has exerted on Baghdad to other countries.
We have to help the Iraqis with this perennial pressure from the Iranians to access the money, stated the US official.
The Iraqis have requested, and now we have agreed, to expand the waiver, said the official, adding this might help ensure better compliance with the US requirement that any disbursements be for humanitarian purposes.