White House: Government shutdown hurts enforcement of Iran, Syria sanctions

Obama administration highlights one of the damaging effects of the fiscal standoff to try to pressure Republicans to give ground.

US President Barack Obama at the White House 370 (photo credit: Reuters)
US President Barack Obama at the White House 370
(photo credit: Reuters)
The US government shutdown is hindering enforcement of sanctions against Iran and Syria because of worker furloughs at the Treasury Department office responsible for handling the punitive measures, the White House said on Friday.
Highlighting one of the damaging effects of the fiscal standoff to try to pressure Republicans to give ground, White House spokesman Jay Carney said the shutdown had reduced staffing at Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control to 11 employees from a normal contingent of 175.
The comments came as the Obama administration's diplomatic engagement with new Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has put a focus on U.S. sanctions, which are widely seen as having damaged Iran's economy enough to force Tehran back to the negotiating table.
The White House has sought to cast blame on Republicans for bringing much of the government to a standstill by seeking to defund or delay President Barack Obama's healthcare program as a condition of allowing a vote on spending that would reopen the government. House of Representatives Republicans accuse Obama of intransigence and not caring about the shutdown's effects.
Obama was to be briefed by top aides on Friday on the impact of the four-day-old shutdown, including how furloughs have hurt the Office of Foreign Assets Control.
"The office is unable to sustain its core functions," Carney told reporters at the daily White House briefing. "That is a negative consequence of this wholly unnecessary decision by the House Republicans to shut down the government."
The office's tasks include "issuing new sanctions designations against those enabling the governments of Iran and Syria, as well as terrorist organizations, WMD (weapons of mass destruction) proliferators, narcotics cartels, and transnational organized crime groups," Carney said.