Secretary of State Antony Blinken signed off on the sanctions waivers late last week,a month after US and Iranian officials said an agreement in principle was in place. Congress was not informed of the waiver decision until Monday (Tuesday AEST),according to the notification,which was obtained by The Associated Press.
The outlines of the deal had been previously announced and the waiver was expected. But the notification marked the first time the administration said it was releasing five Iranian prisoners as part of the deal. The prisoners have not been named.
The waiver drew criticism of President Joe Biden from Republicans and others who say it would boost the Iranian economy at a time when Iran poses a growing threat to US troops and Middle East allies.
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On X,the platform formerly known as Twitter,Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa said “it’s ridiculous for US to be blackmailed into paying $US6 billion for hostages which will help indirectly finance the number one foreign policy of Iran:terrorism”. Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas accused Biden of “paying ransom to the world’s worst state sponsor of terrorism”.
The waiver means that European,Middle Eastern and Asian banks will not run afoul of US sanctions in converting the money frozen in South Korea and transferring it to Qatar’s central bank,where it will be held for Iran to use for the purchase of humanitarian goods.
The transfer was the critical element in the prisoner release deal,which already resulted in four of the five American detainees being transferred from Iranian jails into house arrest last month. The fifth detainee had already been under house arrest.