US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced on Tuesday the imposition of sanctions against nine entities for doing business with three people in Iran’s oil industry, who were also sanctioned. The same day, the US Commerce Department added 18 corporations and five Iranian scientists to its “Entity List,” which bars Americans from doing business with them without a special license.
Meanwhile, there are more than 17,000 cases of the COVID-19 novel coronavirus in Iran, where more than 1,100 people have died, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University; both statistics are the world’s third-highest, after China and Italy. Tehran has urged the US as well as the UN, International Monetary Fund and other world institutions to lower economic sanctions and send emergency aid, but Washington has remained intransigent, refusing help unless Iran releases jailed Americans.
Mohammad Marandi, an expert on American studies and postcolonial literature who teaches at the University of Tehran, told Radio Sputnik’s Loud and Clear Wednesday that Iranians feel like Americans want as many of them as possible to die in order to achieve their political goals.
“In the past, this maximum pressure campaign has killed Iranian citizens who were in need of certain medicines, and those medicines were not available because Iran can’t use the global banking system, and, therefore, sometimes the medicines arrive late or the materials needed to produce medicines in Iran arrive late, and thus causing the loss of life,” he told hosts John Kiriakou and Brian Becker.
“The sanctions are an attempt to intensify the pressure at a time when Iran is facing a major challenge through the coronavirus,” Marandi said. “The belief here is that the Americans want the coronavirus to spread as much as possible in Iran and to make the health care system and the hospitals in the country overwhelmed by patients, in order to maximize suffering so that they can get concessions from Iran.”
“Beyond being barbaric and inhumane, one of the major issues that the Americans are not even taking into consideration is that this virus does not recognize borders, and if Iran fails in its fight against the virus, then that is very dangerous for the whole of the international community,” Marandi noted.
The scholar noted that the sanctions are interrupting key parts of the supply chain for locally produced medicines and equipment.
“China, so far, has given more aid to Iran than any other country. During the outbreak of the coronavirus in China, despite the sanctions, Iran was among the first countries to provide aid to China, and China returned the favor - in a big way, I must say - and that has helped,” Marandi said. However, he noted “there is definitely a shortage, there will continue to be a shortage, and Iranians believe the Americans are using this to their advantage. The Americans want to see as many Iranians killed as possible and as many Iranians infected as possible in order to undermine Iran’s sovereignty.”
“For Iranians, this is a crime against humanity, and it’s something almost unprecedented in human history,” Marandi said.
There is, however, at least one similar situation: in the early 1990s, amid the collapse of the Soviet Union and the onset of severe natural disasters that crushed North Korea’s ability to feed itself, Washington withheld food aid as a weapon to extract the coercive Agreed Framework from Pyongyang, forcing a halt to its nuclear program. Upwards of 3 million Koreans had died by 1998 from starvation or complications caused by famine.
Marandi blasted Western media as “extraordinarily immoral” for trying to project an image of chaos and fear inside Iran to the rest of the globe. He identified it as “part of this broader campaign to hurt ordinary Iranians.”
“Iran has been quite calm. We have not seen the sort of scenes that we’ve seen in Europe and the United States, where people rush to shop and take away whatever is available. The local supermarkets that are near my house have everything that I need,” he said, noting that shortages tend to be isolated and short-lived.
“The problem is with the hospitals: the hospitals need a lot of equipment and a lot of medicines and a large number of test kits in order to be able to deal with the current situation,” he noted. Last week, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif tweeted a list of those needs, including respirators that can mean the difference between life and death for sufferers of the virus, which attacks the lungs and respiratory system.
“It is a country of 85 million people. Many of our neighboring countries are broken because of US invasions,” Marandi said. He noted that Iranian officials believe the region’s infection rate is much higher than governments are announcing, because many of them don’t have strong enough health care systems to adequately and accurately detect all COVID-19 cases.
“So not only is Iran struggling because of US sanctions … but also because of the general poverty that exists in the region, that has created an even greater challenge for this country,” he said.