Iran and the U.S. are stuck.
The Treasury thinks it can break the standoff with money, not bombs. Scott Bessent flew to Paris on Tuesday. His pitch to G7 allies: stop letting Iran's money keep moving.
Treasury's New Sanctions Playbook
Bessent's Paris speech laid out a new sanctions blueprint. The Treasury calls the broader push "Operation Economic Fury."
He said the U.S. has frozen Iran-linked crypto. It has also cracked down on Tehran's "shadow banking" networks. Those are the back routes Iran uses to move oil cash. The cash flows through foreign banks and shell firms.
The Treasury is also rolling back old sanctions. The aim is to free up banks. Banks can then focus on the real bad actors.
His broader goal: shorter sanctions with clearer targets and end dates. He said rules that drag on can cause harm that lingers past the threat.
The framing matters for buyers of stocks and bonds. A sharper sanctions push can take the noise out of oil prices. It can also calm freight and shipping costs. All three have swung on every Iran headline.
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The Ask To Europe
Bessent did not just rally allies for moral support. He spelled out specific homework.
He wants European partners to name Iran's bankers. He wants them to out the shell firms Iran uses to move money. He wants the foreign bank branches that still serve Tehran shut down. And he wants Iran-linked proxies broken up.
It is a lot to ask. European banks have spent years working through messy U.S., U.K., and EU rules.
Most big European banks pulled back from Iran years ago after past U.S. rounds. A fresh round means more legal risk for the few who stayed.
The friction is not just legal. It is also political. Some European voters do not want their banks doing more for the U.S.
Bessent's bet: the cost of doing nothing is now higher than the cost of acting. He told the room that the U.S. is tired of fighting Iran alone.
Worth Noting
The U.S. has already cut "tens of billions" from Iran's oil cash, by Bessent's count. The real test is how fast allies move from talk to action.
European leaders have been more careful than D.C. on Iran for years. Their banks also have more Middle East ties. That is part of why Bessent had to pitch this in person. Not over the phone.
For traders, the timing matters. Oil names, defense names, and shipping insurers are all priced on the bet that this standoff does not last. The fear is a long Middle East war that pushes oil higher and stocks lower into the summer.
Treasury wants this conflict to end with a financial squeeze on Tehran instead of more missiles in the air.
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