Trump administration ends Iraq’s waiver to buy Iranian electricity

Pakistan(National Times)- The Trump administration rescinded a waiver on Saturday that had allowed Iraq to pay Iran for electricity, as part of President Donald Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign against Tehran, a US State Department spokesperson said. The decision to let Iraq’s waiver lapse upon its expiration “ensures we do not allow Iran any degree of economic or financial relief,” the spokesperson said, adding that Trump’s campaign on Iran aims “to end its nuclear threat, curtail its ballistic missile program and stop it from supporting terrorist groups”. Trump restored “maximum pressure” on Iran in one of his first acts after returning to office in January. In his first term, he pulled the US out of the Iran nuclear deal, a multinational agreement to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. The US government has said it wants to isolate Iran from the global economy and eliminate its oil export revenues in order to slow Tehran’s development of a nuclear weapon. Iran denies pursuing nuclear weapons and says its program is peaceful. Washington has imposed a range of sanctions on Tehran over its nuclear program and support for militant organisations, effectively banning countries that do business with Iran from doing business with the US “President Trump has been clear that the Iranian Regime must cease its ambitions for a nuclear weapon or face Maximum Pressure,” said National Security spokesperson James Hewitt. “We hope the regime will put the interests of its people and the region ahead of its destabilising policies.”

Pressure on Baghdad

Trump initially granted waivers to several buyers to meet consumer energy needs when he reimposed sanctions on Iran’s energy exports in 2018, citing its nuclear program and what the US calls its meddling in the Middle East. His administration and that of Joe Biden repeatedly renewed Iraq’s waiver while urging Baghdad to reduce its dependence on Iranian electricity. The State Department spokesperson reiterated that call on Saturday.n”We urge the Iraqi government to eliminate its dependence on Iranian sources of energy as soon as possible,” the spokesperson said. “Iran is an unreliable energy supplier.” The US has used the waiver review in part to increase pressure on Baghdad to allow Kurdish crude oil exports via Turkey, sources have told Reuters. The aim is to boost supply to the global market and keep prices in check, giving the US more room to pursue efforts to choke off Iranian oil exports. Iraq’s negotiations with the semi-autonomous Kurdish region over the oil export resumption have been fraught so far. “Iraq’s energy transition provides opportunities for US companies, which are world-leading experts in increasing the productivity of power plants, improving electricity grids, and developing electricity interconnections with reliable partners,” the State Department spokesperson said. The spokesperson played down the impact of Iranian electricity imports on Iraq’s power grid, saying, “In 2023, electricity imports from Iran were only 4% of electricity consumption in Iraq.”



Latest News
US launches fresh strikes on Iran, Tehran targets American assets in Gulf states in flareup over Hormuz
CDF Munir arrives in Turkiye on 2-day official visit: state media
PM Shehbaz meets Qatari leader Sheikh Tamim, condoles death of ex-emir Sheikh Hamad
PSX opens week in the red as Middle East hostilities spark ‘risk-off’ market mood
8 more terrorists killed during ongoing Operation Shaban in Balochistan: state media
Court extends physical remand of suspects in alleged kidnapping, rape of two foreign women
Stakeholders blamed for Tarbela-5 cofferdam collapse
PM Shehbaz departs for one-day visit to Qatar to condole death of ex-emir Sheikh Hamad




Multi Media   
Pakistan Exposes India’s Human Rights Record in IIOJK at UNHRC
 Multi Media
2025 in Review: A Year of Impact and Progress in Brussels
 Multi Media
DPM-FM Senator Ishaq Dar’s High-Level Brussels Visit: Key Highlights
 Multi Media
Embassy of Pakistan 🇵🇰 in Brussels || Quarterly Recap of Activities, Engagements & Outreach
 Multi Media
DPM Dar sends Trump peace prize nomination to Nobel Committee