US House speaker praises Trump’s Iran policy, senator calls for China sanctions
US House Speaker Mike Johnson on Friday praised US President Donald Trump’s approach to Iran for ramping up pressure on Tehran and its regional allies, as a US senator called for additional sanctions on China over its role in Iran’s missile program.
Speaking alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Johnson said Trump and Netanyahu both understand that “peace is secured through strength, not appeasement”.
“This week, (Trump) announced a plan to exert maximum pressure on Iran and its proxies who terrorize the Israeli people and the world,” Johnson said.
Trump on Tuesday signed a directive restoring the so-called maximum pressure policy on Iran of his first term and warned of "catastrophic" consequences if Tehran does not make a deal on its nuclear program.
Following the directive, on Thursday, the United States announced sanctions on networks involved in shipping Iranian oil to China.
The coordinated actions by the Treasury Department and the State Department span multiple countries, including China, India and the United Arab Emirates and involve several vessels linked to Iran's exports.
The new sanctions aim to disrupt Iran’s use of foreign-based brokers and front companies to bypass restrictions and sustain its oil exports, the treasury said.
The Treasury's move focuses on state firm Sepehr Energy, previously designated by the Office of Foreign Assets Control in late 2023 for its alleged ties to Iran’s Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics.
US Senator Pete Ricketts called for further action, urging the administration to impose costs on China, which he said plays a key role in Iran’s missile program.
"Reimposing maximum pressure on the Iranian regime requires imposing costs on Communist China,” the Republican Senator from Nebraska said in a post on X Friday.
“We encourage the administration to identify and sanction any entities involved in transferring missile propellants to Iran, including any Chinese companies sourcing the propellants and any Chinese ports that allow sanctioned Iranian ships to dock,” Ricketts added.
The German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA) canceled a Berlin event featuring Iranian-American analyst Trita Parsi, citing security concerns after public backlash over his participation.
"Protests against the program have forced us to postpone, as we feel unable to guarantee the security of the event and panel members," GIGA said in a statement.
Parsi is accused by some dissidents and opponents of the Islamic Republic of furthering Tehran's policy narratives in the West.
An Iran International investigation in 2023 linked him and other oft cited analysts as being a part of a grouping formed by the Iranian government with the aim of advancing its perspectives on nuclear talks in the run-up to an international deal in 2015.
GIGA had planned to host the event on Feb. 17 where Parsi was to discuss a recent report on the prospects of multilateralism from the Quincy Institute, where Parsi is the executive vice president.
Following the announcement of Parsi as a speaker, a petition launched on Monday demanding that GIGA rescind his invitation gathered over 4,800 signatures within four days before the event was canceled.
Political activists and opponents of the Islamic Republic had also taken to social media to protest Parsi’s participation, accusing him of lobbying for Tehran and calling for institutions to prevent figures associated with the Iranian government from attending research conferences.
Some protesters had warned they would stage demonstrations outside the event venue if it was not canceled.
"We share the concerns of many protesters about the authoritarian government in Iran and its regional role, but neither the role of Iran or any other specific country was the topic of this event," GIGA added it its statement.
No new date has been announced for the rescheduled event.
This is not the first time Parsi has taken part in GIGA’s events. In 2024, he spoke at two online discussions hosted by the institute, where he addressed topics such as the future of Iran’s allied forces in the Middle East and the Israel-Hamas war.
Swedish broadcaster TV4 recently reported that Parsi’s brother, Rouzbeh Parsi, head of the Middle East program at Sweden’s Foreign Policy Institute, was linked to a network within Iran’s foreign ministry that sought to influence Western policies.
In 2023, a joint investigative report by Iran International and Semafor uncovered thousands of emails from Iranian diplomats, exposing a network of academics and think tank analysts cultivated by Iran's Foreign Ministry to advance Tehran's soft power agenda.
This network, known as the Iran Experts Initiative (IEI), was reportedly directed by the Foreign Ministry in shaping public commentary and media appearances. Members of the IEI held influential positions in Western think tanks and policy institutions, playing a pivotal role in promoting Iran's viewpoints on the global stage.
The economic impact of the so-called maximum pressure on Iran will be significant, with a zero-exports goal set by US president Donald Trump.
On Tuesday, Trump signed a directive reinstating the "maximum pressure" policy from his first term, warning of "catastrophic" consequences if Tehran doesn't reach a deal on its nuclear program. His goal of eliminating Iran’s oil exports is particularly alarming for Tehran, as it would eliminate nearly half of the government's revenues during a seven-year economic crisis.
In its first move, the US Treasury Department on Thursday imposed sanctions on an international network, alleging that it has facilitated the shipment of Iranian oil to China. In a coordinated step, the Treasury and State Departments announced sanctions targeting networks involved in shipping Iranian oil to China. The measures cover multiple countries, including China, India, and the United Arab Emirates, and affect several vessels linked to Iran's oil exports.
While the impact of this order, if fully implemented, would be significant for Iran’s oil exports, there is doubt as to whether it will actually reduce the oil exports to zero or to the levels seen in 2020, the final year of Trump's previous presidency. In 2017, before US sanctions were imposed, Iran exported 2.5 million barrels per day (bpd). By 2020, this figure had plummeted to around 350,000 bpd.
As Joe Biden took office in 2021, Iran’s oil exports rebounded, peaking at nearly 1.9 million bpd in the summer of 2024. After President Biden administration’s imposed sanctions on dozens of tankers involved in smuggling Iranian oil, exports dropped by 500,000 bpd in the final quarter of 2024.
Yet, in January this year, exports once again surged to 1.6 million bpd.
The ship-tracking company Tanker Trackers told Iran International that the recent fluctuations in Iran’s oil exports are typical, noting that such variations are common. "We saw a similar drop during the final months of Biden's presidency, followed by a rebound. There's nothing unusual about it. The average for crude oil exports over the past year is 1.572 million barrels per day, and since January, it has been 1.567 Mbpd. So, it's too early to draw conclusions," the company said.
Iran's Kharq Island in the Persian Gulf is the main loading point for Iranian oil.
Regarding Iran's logistical challenges, Tanker Trackers explained, "There are policies, and then there are logistics. We’re not yet convinced that Iran’s oil exports will drop to the levels seen in May 2019 (439 Kbpd), mainly because there wasn’t an extensive global dark fleet available back then, unlike what we have today."
The United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) organization, a non-profit group dedicated to preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, in collaboration with tanker-tracking companies, has identified nearly 400 vessels involved in smuggling Iranian oil, collectively known as the "dark fleet." However, fewer than half of these vessels have been sanctioned.
These tankers attempt to smuggle Iranian oil covertly by turning off their automatic identification systems (AIS).
Currently, China is virtually Iran’s only oil customer. However, it does not purchase oil directly from Iran. Instead, Iranian oil is sold through intermediaries and changes ownership documentation, being rebranded as oil from Iraq, the UAE, Oman, and especially Malaysia before being sold to China’s small, independent refineries.
Tanker Trackers noted that China has already stated repeatedly that importing oil is a matter of national security, regardless of the source.
Meanwhile, the energy consultancy firm Wood Mackenzie told Iran International that the recent drop in Iranian crude oil exports is due to a combination of tighter sanctions on tankers imposed by former President Biden and China’s Shandong port declaring that sanctioned vessels will not be allowed to discharge their cargoes to independent refinery clients.
Wood Mackenzie said that given the recent US sanctions on China and Beijing’s retaliatory tariffs, we do not expect China to comply with Trump’s ‘maximum pressure’ policy on Iran.”
Senior commodity analyst Homayoun Falakshahi from Kpler, a commodities intelligence firm, told Iran International that Iran’s daily oil exports stood at 1.66 million bpd last month. However, he predicted that due to the reinstatement of Trump’s maximum pressure policy, exports could fall to around 500,000 bpd in the coming months.
He added that the extent of this decline depends on Beijing’s cooperation with US sanctions.
China and the US conduct $750 billion in annual commodity and service trade, heavily favoring China. However, Trump recently ordered an increase in tariffs on Chinese imports, prompting Beijing to threaten retaliation.
While China has repeatedly stated that it does not recognize US unilateral sanctions against Iran, its recent ban on US-sanctioned vessels docking at its ports suggests that it takes Washington’s sanctions somewhat seriously.
Iran’s share of China’s oil imports exceeds 10%, with an annual value of around $40 billion. China is also the largest buyer of sanctioned Iranian goods, including metals and petrochemical products. Additionally, a significant portion of Iranian refined petroleum products, such as fuel oil (mazut) and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), is shipped to China.
Iranian customs data shows that, excluding crude oil, the country exported $12.3 billion worth of goods to China and imported $14.4 billion from China in the first ten months of the current Iranian calendar year (which began on March 21, 2024).
Dissident Iranian journalist and rights activist Masih Alinejad has been invited to the Munich Security Conference, according to a guest list seen by Iran International.
Alinejad received the invitation in mid-January this year.
She also attended the conference last year, where she met with several European politicians and activists, urged the designation of Iran's Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) as a terrorist organization in Europe and highlighted human rights abuses in Iran.
Iranian exiled prince Reza Pahlavi has also been invited to the conference. Earlier, the Munich Security Conference (MSC) told Iran International that Reza Pahlavi's invitation has been maintained, after the exiled prince accused Germany of interfering to block his participation.
Pahlavi took to X to confirm that the MSC had told him his invitation remains in place.
"This conference, like all public engagements, was always about my compatriots and having their voices heard on the world stage. So I will go with a message from the Iranian people: our fight is not just to free Iran, but the world, from the terror and blackmail of the Islamic Republic," Pahlavi wrote.
The UN Special Rapporteur on Iran, Mai Sato, has sounded the alarm after Iran’s Supreme Court denied a judicial review for Pakhshan Azizi, a Kurdish political prisoner and humanitarian worker facing a death sentence.
“Her imminent execution would violate international human rights law,” Sato wrote on Friday on X, urging Iranian authorities to “immediately halt her execution.”
Azizi was arrested in August 2023 and sentenced to death for armed rebellion against the state after an Islamic Revolutionary Court trial in Tehran last July.
Rights groups say the charges are politically motivated and linked to her humanitarian work helping women and children displaced by Islamic State attacks in northeast Syria.
Azizi's lawyer, Amir Raisian, wrote on X that they will file another retrial request and appeal to Iran's judiciary chief in a last-ditch effort to stop the execution.
Amnesty International also slammed the decision, saying, “The Iranian authorities must halt the execution of arbitrarily detained humanitarian aid worker Pakhshan Azizi, who was sentenced to death following a grossly unfair trial,”
The organization's deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa Diana Eltahawy also pointed to reports that Azizi was tortured by authorities and faced gender-based violence in detention.
Other rights groups have warned that Azizi’s case reflects a broader pattern of the Iranian state arbitrarily wielding the death penalty to suppress dissent—especially in the wake of the nationwide 2022 protests demanding the government's downfall.
US Deputy Special Envoy for the Middle East, Morgan Ortagus, said on Friday that Hezbollah's "reign of terror" in Lebanon and the region is over, crediting increased US pressure on Iran for the group's decline.
Speaking after meeting with newly elected Lebanese President Joseph Aoun in Beirut, Ortagus said Hezbollah’s involvement in Lebanon’s new government crosses a clear red line for Washington.
"We are committed to making sure that Hezbollah is not a part of this government in any form and that Hezbollah remains disarmed and militarily defeated. That starts with the pressure President Trump is placing on the Islamic Republic of Iran so they can no longer fund their terror proxies in the region," Ortagus said.
Her remarks come as Lebanon’s political landscape experiences what experts have called a seismic shift, with the election of US- and Arab-backed Aoun as president and Hezbollah reeling from its bruising defeats at the hands of Israel.
"The end of Hezbollah’s reign of terror in Lebanon and around the world has started, and it’s over," she said.
Ortagus emphasized that the US will continue efforts to prevent Iran from achieving nuclear capabilities and from destabilizing countries across the Middle East. "Iran was allowed to inflict chaos and harm in this country and so many others for decades, that ends with President Trump," Ortagus said.
Hezbollah suffered its most significant setbacks in years during Israeli strikes last year, with coordinated attacks in September and October decimating thousands of its operatives through precision airstrikes and targeted explosions. The killing of key figures, including Hassan Nasrallah, the group's longtime secretary-general, shattered Hezbollah’s leadership core and left its command structure in disarray.
As Prime Minister-designate Nawaf Salam works to form his cabinet, US officials are urging Beirut to block Hezbollah and its allies from securing key posts, particularly the finance ministry.
Citing sources, Reuters reported that Washington relayed that Lebanon could face difficulties securing foreign financial aid crucial for post-war reconstruction if Hezbollah or Amal—a Shia political party and longtime Hezbollah ally—were to select the country's next finance minister.