US, Qatar to halt Iran access to $6bn fund after Hamas attack: report
Washington, United States – – AFP
The United States and Qatar officials have agreed to prevent Iran from using a $6 billion humanitarian assistance fund, amid suspicions of Iran’s assistance to Palestinian resistance group Hamas.
The money had been transferred to Iranian accounts in Qatar, in a US-Iran prisoner swap deal announced in recent weeks where five US detainees were also released by Iran.
However, the Washington Post reported that a decision was made to halt access to the funds, while President Joe Biden faces rising pressure on the matter given concerns over Iran’s connections to Hamas.
Tehran has come under intense scrutiny since fighters of the Palestinan resistance group stormed across Israel’s southern border at the weekend.
Israel retaliated against Hamas’ Operation Al Aqsa Flood by raining air and artillery strikes on impoverished Gaza for six days, claiming over 1,350 lives.
“We have strict oversight of the funds and we retain the right to freeze them,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told a press conference in Tel Aviv.
The White House added in a separate briefing that “every single dime of that money is still sitting in a Qatari bank.”
“Not one dime of it has been spent,” according to National Security Council spokesman John Kirby, adding that the US is watching the account closely but refusing to speculate about “future transactions.”
US officials said earlier that they had not seen any intelligence to show Iran was involved in planning or preparing the Hamas attacks.
However, Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo told Democrats in the House of Representatives that the Iran funds are not “going anywhere anytime soon,” according to The Washington Post report, which also noted the comment was first published by Punchbowl.
The Treasury Department declined to comment on the matter.
Some US senators have called for a re-freeze of the $6 billion in Iranian oil revenue as the conflict raged on.
The Biden administration maintains that the money is restricted to humanitarian use.