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						Rouhani says Iran to continue oil exports and resist 
						U.S. economic war
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		 [November 19, 2018]   
		By Parisa Hafezi 
 (Reuters) - Iran will continue to export 
		oil despite U.S. sanctions, which are part of a psychological war doomed 
		to failure, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said on Monday.
 
 By reimposing sanctions on OPEC's third biggest crude producer, 
		Washington wants to force Tehran to drop its ballistic missile programs, 
		further curb its nuclear work and limit its support for proxy militias 
		from Syria to Lebanon and Yemen.
 
 "We will not yield to this pressure, which is part of the psychological 
		war launched against Iran," Rouhani said in a speech in the city of Khoy, 
		broadcast live on state television.
 
 "They have failed to stop our oil exports. We will keep exporting it ... 
		Your regional policies have failed and you blame Iran for that failure 
		from Afghanistan to Yemen and Syria," he added, to chants of "Death to 
		America!".
 
 
		
		 
		Rouhani said Washington lacked the necessary international support for 
		its sanctions, and noted that it had granted temporary waivers to eight 
		major buyers of Iranian oil.
 
 "America is isolated now. Iran is supported by many countries. Except 
		for the Zionist regime (Israel) and some countries in the region, no 
		other country backs America's pressure on Iran," he said.
 
 The European Union, France, Germany, Britain, Russia and China, 
		participants with the United States in the 2015 deal that lifted 
		sanctions on Iran in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program, have 
		been trying to find ways to circumvent the U.S. limitations.
 
 In particular, the EU has been trying to establish a Special Purpose 
		Vehicle (SPV) for non-dollar trade with Iran.
 
 But this has not stopped foreign businesses ranging from oil companies 
		and trading houses to firms leaving Iran for fear of incurring U.S. 
		penalties.
 
		
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			Iranian President Hassan Rouhani arrives to give public speeches in 
			the city of Khoy, West Azerbaijan province, Iran November 19, 2018. 
			Official President website/Handout via REUTERS 
            
			 
Iran has threatened to exit the deal if its economic benefits are not preserved, 
but Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi told a news conference that it 
remained "hopeful that the Europeans can save the deal".
 The SPV was conceived as a clearing house that could be used to help match 
Iranian oil and gas exports against purchases of EU goods, circumventing the 
U.S. sanctions, which are based on the global use of the dollar for oil trade.
 
 The EU wanted to have the SPV set up by this month, but no country has offered 
to host it, six diplomats told Reuters last week.
 
"We expect EU to implement the SPV as soon as possible," Qasemi said. "Iran 
adheres to its commitments as long as other signatories honor theirs."
 Iran's deputy Oil Minister Amirhossein Zamaninia said "France might host the SPV", 
the semi-official Fars news agency reported on Monday.
 
 The French Foreign Ministry declined to comment. The Finance Ministry has said 
that all options are on the table for the SPV and that no decisions had been 
taken.
 
 Washington has warned that European banks and firms who engage in the SPV will 
be at risk from the reimposed U.S. sanctions.
 
 (Additional reporting by John Irish and Leigh Thomas in PARIS; Writing by Parisa 
Hafezi; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Raissa Kasolowsky)
 
				 
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