Peace talks appear stalled, or even halted completely - despite President Trump's denials - and the US Department of Treasury is still swinging hard, as part of the ongoing effort to bring about economic collapse in Iran and 'solve' the Hormuz Strait shipping crisis.
In the latest installment of Washington's economic whac-a-mole, the US on Tuesdayunveiled sanctions on Iran's biggest cryptocurrency exchange - and several others, for allegedly enabling the Iranian government and blacklisted state institutions tothwart US and EU sanctions.
The largest platform, identified asNobitex, is believed to have assisted in allowing hundreds of millions of dollars to pour into Iran's central bank and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), as a sanctions work-around and parallel financial system.
"While Iran’s economy is in free fall, the regime has chosen to co-opt digital asset technologies for its own corrupt agenda, including evading sanctions and transferring wealth out of the country," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated in announcing the new action.
"Following the commencement of U.S. combat operations in Iran,Nobitex played a role in protecting and moving assets and funds out of Iran to shield regime wealth despite internet blackouts," the statement added.
Nobitex rejected that it has direct government connections and denied that it has been assisting state institutions. It also said it did nothing to conceal the identities of the owners.
As for ownership, Reuters hasdocumented:
...Nobitex is controlled by two brothers from one of Iran’s most powerful families, with close ties to the new supreme leader. The two are members of the Kharrazi family, one of the most influential dynasties in the Islamic Republic. Corporate records show that when the exchange started, the brothers were listed under a surname rarely used by members of the family.
The brothers were named by the Treasury as Seyed Mohammad Ali Aghamir Mohammad Ali and Seyed Mohammad Aghamir Mohammad Ali, who were also subject to individual sanctions, along with the exchange’s chief executive officer, Amir Hossein Rad.
Last Friday Bessent detailed how the US has seized a total of$1 billion in Iranian cryptocurrency assetsto date as part of the economic component of President Trump's Operation Epic Fury.
Source: ZeroHedge News