Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

SWIFT to disconnect from Central Bank of Iran as renewed sanctions kick in

The development comes as SWIFT announced that it is “suspending certain Iranian banks’ access to the messaging system” after U.S. sanctions were reimposed on Nov. 5.

Central Bank of Iran in Tehran. Credit: Ensie & Matthias/Flickr.
Central Bank of Iran in Tehran. Credit: Ensie & Matthias/Flickr.

The international financial transaction system known as the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, or SWIFT, will disconnect access from the Central Bank of Iran, according to U.S. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin.

“I understand that SWIFT will be discontinuing service to the Central Bank of Iran and designated Iranian financial institutions,” Mnuchin ">posted on Twitter on Thursday. “SWIFT is making the right decision to protect the integrity of the international financial system.”

This development comes as SWIFT announced on Monday it is “suspending certain Iranian banks’ access to the messaging system” after U.S. sanctions were reimposed on Nov. 5. They had been lifted under the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, which America exited in May.

“In keeping with our mission of supporting the resilience and integrity of the global financial system as a global and neutral service provider, SWIFT is suspending certain Iranian banks’ access to the messaging system,” SWIFT announced.

The Belgium-based organization noted that “this step, while regrettable, has been taken in the interest of the stability and integrity of the wider global financial system.”

Iran will still be able to access SWIFT for solely humanitarian purposes, said Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin last week in a conference call with reporters.

“Humanitarian transactions to non-designated entities will be allowed to use the SWIFT messaging system as they have done before,” he said, “but banks must be very careful that these are not disguised transactions, or they could be subject to certain sanctions.”

Treasury targets Iranian, Russian and Italian nationals and companies in Iran-linked procurement network as CENTCOM says two vessels attempting to run the Strait of Hormuz blockade were redirected.
A federal jury convicted Mahdi Mohammad Sadeghi for illegally exporting sensitive U.S. information to the Islamic Republic.
Steven Thrasher alleges that he was denied tenure as a result of his participation in anti-Israel activities on campus post-Oct. 7.
“This is not a case of a few bad apples,” Yoni Tobin, senior policy analyst at JINSA, told JNS. “It’s a case of a rotten tree.”
The tankers created a bottleneck at the airport due to a shortage of room to park planes.
“The extension of daylight saving time will create an extreme hardship on observant Jews,” Rabbi A.D. Motzen, of Agudah, told JNS. “It would be extraordinarily difficult, if not impossible, to arrive on time for a job and will affect the start time of our schools.”