The  following is a joint statement by Department of State Secretary  Hillary Rodham Clinton and Department of the Treasury Secretary  Timothy Geithner on new Iran sanctions. A fact sheet detailing the new sanctions is below.
       Today,  the United States imposed sanctions on Tidewater Middle East Company,  an operator of Iranian ports owned by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard  Corps (IRGC) that has links to Iranian proliferation activities. We also  imposed sanctions against Iran Air, which was designated for providing  material support and services to the IRGC and Iran’s Ministry of Defense  and Armed Forces Logistics (MODAFL), and also has facilitated  proliferation-related activities.  Today’s sanctions also exposed an  Iranian individual and entity for their ties to a company that provided  support and weapons to Hizballah on behalf of the IRGC. 
 
       The  IRGC’s illicit activities and its increasing displacement of the  legitimate Iranian private sector in major strategic industries,  including in the commercial and energy sectors, are deeply troubling.   The IRGC also serves as the domestic “enforcer” for the Iranian regime,  continues to play an important proliferation role by orchestrating the  import and export of prohibited items to and from Iran, is involved in  support of terrorism throughout the region, and is responsible for  serious human rights abuses against peaceful Iranian protestors and  other opposition participants.
 
        Preventing  Iran from developing nuclear weapons is a top U.S. government priority  and we remain deeply concerned about Iran’s nuclear intentions.  The  United States is committed to a dual-track policy of applying pressure  in pursuit of constructive engagement, and a negotiated solution.  
 
        On  June 9, 2011, the P5+1 countries (China, France, Germany, the Russian  Federation, the United Kingdom, and the United States) re-affirmed their  concerns about Iran’s nuclear program and their commitment to a  diplomatic solution in their statement to the International Atomic  Energy Agency’s Board of Governors.  Many other governments have also  expressed serious concerns about the behavior and policies of the  Iranian leadership and have urged Iran to change course and seek a path  of negotiation.  Yet, in the face of this unified international message,  Iran has continued to violate its international obligations and  disregard our attempts to start meaningful negotiations over its nuclear  program.  
 
        For  this reason, the United States is convinced that the international  community must continue to increase and broaden the scope of pressures  on Iran.  We welcome steps such as the European Union’s designation of  more than 100 entities and individuals last month and the improved  implementation of sanctions against Iran that we are seeing around the  world.
 
        This  month, the United States amplified our sanctions against Iran’s  leadership through a comprehensive initiative aimed at Iran’s dangerous  behavior--its continued proliferation activities, its human rights  abuses, and its destabilizing activities in the region.  
 
        On  June 9, we sanctioned the Iranian security forces for human rights  abuses.  Earlier this week, we continued our efforts against the Islamic  Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL), which the UN Security Council  1737 Sanctions Committee noted has been involved in several violations  of UN Security Council resolutions on Iran.  
 
        The  steps we have taken this week seek to limit Iran’s ability to use the  global financial system to pursue illicit activities.  We have made  important progress in isolating Iran, but we cannot waver.  Our efforts  must be unrelenting to sharpen the choice for Iran’s leaders to abandon  their dangerous course.
 
       The  United States and our partners remain fully committed to a diplomatic  solution with Iran.  However, until Iran is prepared to engage seriously  with us on such a solution, we will continue to increase pressure  against Iranian entities of concern.
 
FACT SHEET: Treasury Targets Commercial Infrastructure of IRGC, Exposes Continued IRGC Support for Terrorism
       Today,  the U.S. Department of the Treasury took action to designate two major  Iranian commercial entities: Tidewater Middle East Co. (Tidewater) and  Iran Air. Tidewater is a port operating company owned by Iran’s Islamic  Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) that has been used by the IRGC for  illicit shipments.  Iran’s national airline carrier, Iran Air, is a  commercial airline used by the IRGC and Iran’s Ministry of Defense and  Armed Forces Logistics (MODAFL) to transport military related equipment.  Treasury also designated an individual and an entity for their ties to a  company that provided support and weapons to Hizballah on behalf of the IRGC. 
 
       The  IRGC continues to be a primary focus of U.S. and international  sanctions against Iran because of the central role it plays in all forms  of Iran’s illicit conduct, including Iran’s nuclear and ballistic  missile programs, its support for terrorism, and its involvement in  serious human rights abuses.  As Iran’s isolation has increased, the  IRGC has expanded its reach into critical sectors of Iran’s economic  infrastructure – to the detriment of the Iranian private sector – to  generate revenue and conduct business in support of Iran’s illicit  activities.  
 
       Today’s actions target core commercial interests of the  IRGC, while also undermining the IRGC’s ability to continue using these  interests to facilitate its proliferation activities and other illicit  conduct.
 
| Pursuant  to Executive Order (E.O.) 13382 – an authority aimed at freezing the  assets of proliferators of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and their  supporters thereby isolating them from the U.S. commercial and financial  systems – Treasury today designated: ·         Tidewater Middle East Co.: for being owned by Mehr-e Eqtesad-e Iranian Investment Company, Mehr Bank and the IRGC; ·         Mehr-e Eqtesad-e Iranian Investment Company: for being owned or controlled by Mehr Bank. ·         Iran Air: for providing material support and services to the IRGC and MODAFL, and Iran Air subsidiary Iran Air Tours. Pursuant  to E.O. 13224, which targets for sanctions terrorists and those  providing support to terrorists or acts of terrorism, Treasury today  designated: ·         Iranian official Behnam Shahriyari for acting for or on behalf of Liner Transport Kish (LTK); and the Behnam Shahriyari Trading Company for being owned or controlled by Behnam Shariyari. | 
 
Tidewater Middle East Co. (Tidewater)
       Tidewater-managed  ports are a crucial component of Iran’s infrastructure and transport  network, and shipments into Tidewater facilities provide an avenue of  revenue to the IRGC in support of its illicit conduct. The Iranian  Government has repeatedly used Tidewater-managed ports to export arms or  related materiel in violation of United Nations Security Council  resolutions (UNSCRs).
       Tidewater has operations at seven Iranian ports, including Bandar Abbas’s main container terminal, Shahid Rajaee, which has played a key role in facilitating the Government of Iran’s weapons trade.
 
       Tidewater operations are at the following ports:
 
- Bandar Abbas (Shahid Rajaee Container Terminal)
- Bandar Imam Khomeini Grain Terminal
- Bandar Anzali
- Khorramshahr Port (one terminal)
        Incidents of weapons shipments involving Tidewater-managed facilities include:
 
- An IRGC-Qods Force weapons shipment seized by Nigeria in late October 2010 was loaded at the Shahid Rajaee container terminal at Bandar Abbas.
- A  container shipment of arms-related material, which was discovered in  October 2009 aboard the German-owned and IRISL-chartered ship, the Hansa India, was loaded at Bandar Abbas.
- A container shipment of arms-related material departed Bandar Abbas in January 2009 on the Cypriot-flaged and IRISL-chartered ship, the M/V Monchegorsk, before it was stopped by the U.S. Navy and later seized by Cypriot authorities.
       Tidewater was designated today for being owned by Mehr-e Eqtesad-e Iranian Investment Company, Mehr Bank and the IRGC. Bonyad Taavon Sepah, an entity formed by IRGC commanders to structure IRGC investments, along with Ansar Bank and Mehr Bank – both created by Bonyad Taavon Sepah – were designated by Treasury pursuant to E.O. 13382 in December 2010.
        Mehr-e Eqtesad-e Iranian Investment Company was also sanctioned today for being owned or controlled by IRGC-created Mehr Bank, which was designated by Treasury pursuant to E.O. 13382 in December 2010.
 
        In  August 2010, Treasury issued the Iranian Financial Sanctions  Regulations (IFSR) to implement the financial provisions of the  Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2010  (CISADA). Under the IFSR, Treasury has the authority to prohibit, or  impose strict conditions on, foreign financial institutions’ direct  access to the U.S. financial system if they knowingly facilitate  significant transactions or provide significant financial services for  the IRGC or its agents or affiliates – such as Tidewater – that have  been designated by the United States under the International Emergency  Economic Powers Act, which provides the authority for designations under  E.O. 13382 and 13224.
 
        The  entity being designated today, Tidewater Middle East Co., is separate  and distinct from Tidewater Inc., an international shipping company  headquartered in the United States and listed on the New York Stock  Exchange as TDW.  Today's sanctions are not imposed on Tidewater Inc.
 
Iran Air
        Iran  Air serves as Iran’s national air carrier, operating a fleet of  approximately 40 aircraft covering 35 international and 25 domestic  destinations.  Iran Air Tours is a subsidiary that operates a portion of  Iran Air’s domestic flights. Iran Air has provided support and services  to MODAFL and the IRGC through the transport and/or transfer of goods  for, or on behalf of, these entities. On numerous occasions since 2000,  Iran Air shipped military-related electronic parts and mechanical  equipment on behalf of MODAFL.
 
        MODAFL  was designated by the U.S. Department of State in October 2007 under  E.O. 13382 and has brokered a number of transactions involving materials  and technologies with ballistic missile applications.
 
        Iran  Air has shipped military-related equipment on behalf of the IRGC since  2006, and in September and November 2008, Iran Air shipped  aircraft-related raw materials to a MODAFL-associated company, including  titanium sheets, which have dual-use military applications and can be  used in support of advanced weapons programs.
 
        Rockets  or missiles have been transported via Iran Air passenger aircraft, and  IRGC officers occasionally take control over Iran Air flights carrying  special IRGC-related cargo. The IRGC is also known to disguise and  manifest such shipments as medicine and generic spare parts, and IRGC  officers have discouraged Iran Air pilots from inspecting potentially  dangerous IRGC-related cargo being carried aboard a commercial Iran Air  aircraft, including to Syria.
 
        Additionally, commercial Iran Air flights have also been used to transport missile or rocket components to Syria.
 
        Adopted  in March 2008, UNSCR 1803 called upon all States in accordance with  their national legal authorities and legislation and consistent with  international law, in particular the law of the sea and relevant  international civil aviation agreements, to inspect the cargoes to and  from Iran of aircraft owned or operated by Iran Air Cargo, provided  there are reasonable grounds to believe that the aircraft is  transporting goods prohibited under UNSCR 1803 or previous UNSCRs.
 
        Iran  Air Tours serves as Iran Air’s domestic air carrier, operating a fleet  of 14 aircraft connecting 13 Iranian cities with two main hubs in Tehran  and Mashhad, Iran. 
 
Behnam Shahriyari and Shahriyari Trading Company
        Iranian official Behnam Shahriyari  was designated today for acting for or on behalf of Liner Transport  Kish (LTK), an IRGC-linked shipping company that was designated by  Treasury pursuant to E.O. 13224 in December 2010 for providing material  support, including weapons, to Hizballah on behalf of the IRGC.  Shahriyari acted as LTK’s business and marketing manager.  Additionally, Shahriyari operates the Behnam Shahriyari Trading Company, also designated today. 
 
Background on the IRGC
        The  IRGC has a growing presence in Iran’s financial and commercial sectors  and extensive economic interests in the defense production,  construction, and oil industries, controlling billions of dollars in  corporate business.  Given its increased involvement in commercial  activity, imposing financial sanctions on commercial enterprises of the  IRGC has a direct impact on revenues that could be used by the IRGC to  facilitate illicit conduct.
 
         The  IRGC was first designated by the United States pursuant to E.O. 13382  in October 2007 for having engaged, or attempted to engage, in  proliferation related activities.  The IRGC was also designated by the  United States in June 2011 pursuant to E.O. 13556 for its role in the  sustained and severe human rights abuses in Iran since the disputed June  2009 presidential election.  The UN, European Union, Japan, South Korea  and others have all targeted the IRGC and/or its affiliates for  sanctions because of its illicit activities.