Ex-Meet the Press Host Refuses to Admit This Fact About Joe Biden
Bill Maher Guest: Trump Voters Tell Me They Regret Their Vote.
Oh, So That's the Real Reason Those Democratic Lawmakers Went to El Salvador
Popular Chinese Retailers Hiking Prices in Response to Trump's Tariffs
So, This Is What Ryan Routh Was Planning to Do After Assassinating Trump
State Lawmakers Face Firestorm After This Bizarre Decision on Child Sex Trafficking
Carlsbad Man Stripped of Gun Rights Over Private Conversation With the Wrong Person
Trump-Era Revival: Dolly Parton’s Threads Takes Stage at The Kennedy Center In Patriotic...
MSNBC Urges Reporters to Blur Illegal Alien's Mugshots on WH Lawn
Homan Tells Illegals They ‘Cannot Hide From ICE’
This State Passed a Massive School Choice Measure
Watch: Democratic Rep. Goes on Quite the Unhinged Rant Over Trump, Elon Musk...
Revealed: California Dems Quietly Killed This Successful Policy, for an Infuriating Reason
Former Acting ICE Director Explains How Arrested Illegals Can Help Secure Border
Leader Thune, Other Members Praise Trump's First 100 Days
Tipsheet

Chinese Nationals Get Slapped With Sanctions for Building Iran's Terror Arsenal

AP Photo/Ben Curtis

The U.S. Treasury Department is taking aim at a number of individuals in China for "procuring ballistic missile propellant ingredients on behalf of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps," which are used to fire upon civilian targets in the Middle East and against U.S. troops on the region. Iran is the world's largest state sponsor of terror. 

Advertisement

“Iran’s aggressive development of missiles and other weapons capabilities imperils the safety of the United States and our partners,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent released in a statement about the move.  “It also destabilizes the Middle East, and violates the global agreements intended to prevent the proliferation of these technologies.  To achieve peace through strength, Treasury will continue to take all available measures to deprive Iran’s access to resources necessary to advance its missile program.”

"The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) is designating six entities and six individuals based in Iran and the People’s Republic of China (PRC) for their role in a network procuring ballistic missile propellant ingredients on behalf of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)," a Treasury press release details. "This network has facilitated the procurement of sodium perchlorate and dioctyl sebacate from the PRC to Iran.  Sodium perchlorate is used to produce ammonium perchlorate, which is controlled by the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR), a multilateral political understanding among states that seek to limit the proliferation of missiles and missile technology.  Both ammonium perchlorate and dioctyl sebacate are chemicals usable in solid propellant rocket motors, which are commonly used for ballistic missiles." 

Advertisement

The timing of the sanctions comes as President Donald Trump attempts to negotiate a new nuclear agreement with Iran while implementing a maximum pressure on the regime. High level and direct talks have taken place in Rome and Oman. 

"They can't have a nuclear weapon. It's not a complicated formula," Trump says.  

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement