US demands to see Swiss-Iran gas contract
The US has demanded to see a Swiss contract for natural gas supplies from Iran to see whether it violates an American sanctions law against Tehran, the US Embassy in Switzerland said.
BERN, SWITZERLAND: The US has demanded to see a Swiss contract for natural gas supplies from Iran to see whether it violates an American sanctions law against Tehran, the US Embassy in Switzerland said.
A posting on the US Embassy Web site Sunday raises the question of whether neutral Switzerland's position as representative of American interests in Iran and Cuba could be affected.
"At this time, the Swiss have a mandate as our protecting power in Cuba and Iran," the Web site said in response to a "frequently asked question" on whether the Swiss role was "in jeopardy."
The Swiss have represented US interests in Havana since diplomatic relations with Cuba were broken nearly 50 years ago, and in Tehran since Iranian militants seized the US Embassy in 1979.
The Swiss Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the embassy posting.
That was the same day it was signed in the presence of Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey during a visit to Tehran.
US Embassy spokeswoman Lisbeth Keefe said Washington had originally asked to see the contract last summer, long before the signing.
The Swiss have yet to produce the contract, the embassy said. The 25-year contract, worth between euro18 billion and euro27 billion (US$28 billion and US$42 billion), is between Swiss energy trading company EGL and the state-owned National Iranian Gas Export Company.
The paper said the US told Calmy-Rey not to go to Tehran. The embassy reiterated that the US had told the Swiss ``that major new oil and gas deals with Iran send precisely the wrong message'' to Iran when it is defying UN Security Council resolutions over its uranium-enrichment program.
But it declined to answer what it would do if the Swiss deal is found to be in violation of the U.S. law on grounds the question was hypothetical. Calmy-Rey has said that the contract is in line with Switzerland's rights as an independent country with its own strategic interests to defend.
Under the deal, Iran will supply EGL with up to 5.5 billion cubic meters (194 billion cubic feet) of gas a year, which the Swiss company will then sell to European customers.
Concerns have been raised about the heavy reliance of European countries on natural gas from Russia, which in the past has used its monopoly to exert political pressure on its neighbors. EGL, majority-owned by Axpo Holding AG, has said gas deliveries from Iran will begin in 2009.
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