by John McGlynn
...No, there was no dramatic televised announcement by President George W.... But make no mistake. As of Thursday, March 20 the US is at war with Iran. So who made it official?
A unit within the US Treasury Department, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), which issued a March 20 advisory to the world's financial institutions under the title: "Guidance to Financial Institutions on the Continuing Money Laundering Threat Involving Illicit Iranian Activity."...FinCEN charges, all of Iran's banks -- including the central bank (also on FinCEN's list) -- represent a risk to the international financial system, no exceptions....
To summarize to this point: (1) the March 20 advisory represents a US declaration of war by sanctions on Iran and a sanctions threat to the international banking community, (2) the US has various unilateral financial sanctions measures at its command in the form of executive orders and Patriot Act Section 311 and (3) the BDA-North Korea sanctions were, at least in retrospect, a test run for Iran...
...a Section 311 designation of Iran's central bank would have a powerful coercive effect on the world's banks. For any bank in Europe, Asia, or anywhere else that goes near the central bank once the 311 blacklist is on ...Not only would that bank be barred from the US financial market, it would also be shunned by European and Japanese financial markets, as government and private banking officials in those markets are likely to cooperate with Washington's intensifying sanctions campaign.
China and Japan "were the top two recipients of exports from Iran... On the import side... in 2006 "Germany and China were Iran's largest providers of imports... sanctions imposed on Iran would presumably make the financial administration of this trade next to impossible.
What then will the impact be of this US-Iran banking standoff? For the US, almost no impact...Iran, however, will become another Gaza or Iraq...
That Iran's complete financial and economic destruction is the goal of US policy was spelled out by the State Department the day before the FinCEN announcement.
http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/mcglynn240308.html