US Targets Iranian Oil Networks to China Under "Economic Fury"

The US Treasury designated 12 individuals and entities for enabling the IRGC's sale of Iranian oil to China. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said "Economic Fury" aims to deprive Iran of funding for weapons, proxies, and nuclear ambitions. The action disrupts billions in oil revenue and targets shadow banking networks. Meanwhile, the UK and Lithuania plan to protect shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

Key Points: US Designates Entities for Selling Iranian Oil to China

  • US designates 12 entities for IRGC oil sales to China
  • Treasury targets revenue for weapons, proxies, and nuclear programs
  • "Economic Fury" disrupts billions in oil revenue and freezes crypto
  • UK and Lithuania plan Strait of Hormuz shipping protection
3 min read

"Economic Fury": US designates 12 entities for enabling sale of Iranian oil to China

US Treasury designates 12 entities for IRGC oil sales to China, advancing "Economic Fury" to disrupt funding for weapons, proxies, and nuclear ambitions.

"As Iran's military desperately tries to regroup, Economic Fury will continue to deprive the regime of funding for its weapons programs, terrorist proxies, and nuclear ambitions. - Scott Bessent"

Washington DC, May 12

The United States on Monday designated 12 individuals and entities for their role in enabling the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' sale and shipment of Iranian oil to China.

In a press statement shared on Monday, the Treasury Department accused the IRGC of using the revenue to direct it towards weapons development, backing terrorist proxies and funding security forces, which it said suppressed citizens' freedoms instead of supporting the Iranian people.

The statement said that the action was taken pursuant to the counterterrorism authority Executive Order (E.O.) 13224, as amended, which targets terrorist groups, their supporters, and those who aid in acts of terrorism.

It noted that violations of US sanctions may result in the imposition of civil or criminal penalties on US and foreign persons and that the Office of Foreign Assets may impose civil penalties for sanctions violations on a strict liability basis.

On the move, Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent said that Economic Fury would continue to deprive Iran of funding for its weapons programs, terrorist proxies, and nuclear ambitions.

"As Iran's military desperately tries to regroup, Economic Fury will continue to deprive the regime of funding for its weapons programs, terrorist proxies, and nuclear ambitions. Treasury will continue to cut the Iranian regime off from the financial networks it uses to carry out terrorist acts and to destabilize the global economy," Bessent posted on X.

The statement highlighted how the Treasury is aggressively advancing Economic Fury and claimed to have disrupted billions in projected oil revenue, taken actions that have led to the freezing of nearly half a billion dollars in regime-linked cryptocurrency, and cracked down on Tehran's shadow banking networks.

It added that it is also prepared to take action against any foreign company, "supporting illicit Iranian commerce, including airlines, and, as necessary, may impose secondary sanctions on foreign financial institutions that facilitate Iran's activities--including those connected to the People's Republic of China's independent "teapot" oil refineries."

The statement also noted how, via the blockade, the Trump Administration is directly targeting the regime's primary revenue stream.

As the situation continues to evolve in West Asia and the Gulf region, the UK Navy said on Monday that its warship HMS Dragon is heading to the Middle East ahead of a potential multinational Strait of Hormuz mission.

This comes ahead of the first meeting being hosted by the UK and France of the Strait of Hormuz coalition of defence ministers.

Al Jazeera Breaking reported on Monday that Lithuania plans to deploy troops to protect shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As an American, I support going after Iran's terror funding, but these secondary sanctions on China's teapot refineries feel like a geopolitical chess move more than genuine counterterrorism. The Strait of Hormuz military buildup only raises tensions. Diplomacy, not more warships, is what's needed.
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Arun Y
The US calls it "Economic Fury" but where was this fury when Saudi Arabia was bombing Yemen? Selective outrage. And now UK and Lithuania sending ships to Hormuz? Next thing you know, they'll be asking India to join their coalition. We should stay neutral—our relationship with Iran is strategic, especially for Chabahar port and Afghanistan access.
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Michael C
Interesting how the US Treasury claims to have frozen half a billion in crypto linked to Iran. But these sanctions always hurt ordinary Iranians more than the regime. Meanwhile, our own policymakers in Delhi are probably sweating—India imports a lot of oil, and any disruption in Hormuz will spike prices here. Petrol already ₹100+ in many cities! 😤
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Priyanka N
While I understand the US concerns about Iran's nuclear program and proxies, this feels like America trying to control global oil markets. India should diversify—invest more in renewables and strategic reserves. We can't be held hostage by every US-Iran spat. Also, Chabahar port is vital for Afghanistan trade; hope US gives us a waiver again.
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Tanya I
"Economic Fury" sounds like a video game expansion pack. 🙄 Meanwhile, real people in Iran suffer from inflation and unemployment. The US should focus on dialogue instead of demonizing every country it disagrees with.

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