Sunday, May 13, 2018

Q Drop 513 Iran No Nuke Deal EU lost billions of dollars in Commericals

Q !4pRcUA0lBE ID: 390b3e 1394586 📁
“A group representing German trade interests said the US decision to withdraw from the deal will hit German companies and urged the EU to protect their interests. Trade between Germany and Iran reached 3.4 billion euros ($4 billion) last year, according to BGA, another foreign trade association.”
What about Total S.A.?
Total S.A. is a French multinational integrated oil and gas company and one of the seven "Supermajor" oil companies in the world.
http://www.iran-daily.com/News/214793.html📁
Who recently visited the WH?
What was their purpose?
Coincidence?
What about the safety & security of the world?
What about preventing Iran Nuclear capabilities?
Fake News.
Will the EU resort to protecting the deal so the money flow remains in place?
Why is Kerry in the EU?
Will the US be forced to ban and declare certain EU countries off limits?
Who controls elected leaders?
Who do elected leaders report to?
Pickle.
Will Iran expose the names of corrupt officials?
Pickle.
Will the US expose the names of corrupt officials + con deal?
We await your answer [48].
On Guard.
Q

http://www.iran-daily.com/News/214793.html

Basically when Trump withdrew from the Iran Nuke Deal. Europe lost billions of billions of dollars in commericals!! This is Why Merkel & Macron came to Visit Trump in DC. For more Money. Why? USA is Richest Nation. Boom! thanks Q!

















Trump’s withdrawal from JCPOA deepens US isolation

Major companies, particularly in Europe, could see billions of dollars in commercial deals canceled because of the US decision to reinstall sanctions on Iran, though the ultimate impact remains unclear due to the possibility of renegotiations and exemptions, experts say.
US President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal and reimpose sanctions on Iran means companies worldwide must stop doing business with the country or run afoul of the US government, AP reported. 
Companies and countries with commercial deals with Iran would have either 90 or 180 days to wind down those activities, depending on the type of products being sanctioned. And firms would not be able to generate new business.
Certain exemptions and waivers can be negotiated, but the US did not say what products or countries might qualify.
Since the Iran nuclear deal was struck in 2015, it was mainly European companies that moved back in to strike deals with Iran, making Trump’s decision particularly painful for the region.
“US Iran sanctions are hardly hitting any US companies, but aim primarily at European ones,” Carl Bildt, the former leader of Sweden who is now co-chair of the European Council on Foreign Relations, said in a tweet. The EU has in the past found this utterly unacceptable, he added, though it was unclear still how European leaders would respond.
Among US companies, plane maker Boeing has signed the biggest deals, and US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Tuesday that its existing licenses – as well as those of its European competitor, Airbus Group – would be invalidated.
In December 2016, Airbus signed a deal with Iran’s national carrier, Iran Air, to sell it 100 airplanes for around $19 billion at list prices. Boeing later struck its own deal with Iran Air for 80 aircraft with a list price of some $17 billion, promising that deliveries would begin in 2017 and run until 2025. Boeing separately struck another 30-airplane deal with Iran’s Aseman Airlines for $3 billion at list prices.
Boeing has yet to deliver any aircraft to Iran under those deals and said that it will “continue to follow the US government’s lead.”
Airbus, which is subject to the US license because it makes at least 10 percent of its aircraft components in the US, says it will abide by the new US sanctions but it could take “some time” to determine the full impact on the industry. It has already delivered two A330-200s and one A321 to Iran.

No comments:

Post a Comment