Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps expands role in sanctions-hit oil sector

By Thomas Erdbrink

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

TEHRAN — Taking advantage of the very sanctions directed against it, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps is assuming a leading role in developing the country’s lucrative petroleum sector, Western oil executives and Iranian analysts say.

The Guard’s engineering companies, replacing European oil firms that have largely abandoned Iran, have been rewarded with huge no-bid contracts. Experts warn that U.S. efforts to prevent international investment in Iran’s oil industry are giving the Guard more clout. Iran is the second-largest oil producer in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

“The Revolutionary Guards are smiling at the idea of new sanctions against Iran,” said a Western executive who represents one of the world’s largest oil companies. “Sanctions against the industry or preventing foreign companies from selling gasoline to Iran will mean more money, power and influence for the Guards,” he said.

In the past, the Guard’s role in Iran’s petrochemical sector was restricted to related infrastructure projects, including building roads and canals. But now Guard-affiliated companies oversee the development of most oil projects, and they have taken the lead in key parts of the gigantic South Pars liquefied natural gas project in the Persian Gulf town of Asalouyeh, with Chinese companies increasingly acting as subcontractors.

“It will take them longer, and they will be less efficient, but the Iranian oil and gas sector will continue to grow despite the international obstacles,” said the oil executive, who has spent years in Tehran.

In Washington, a senior U.S. official who spoke on the condition of anonymity said it was not unusual for some government insiders to figure out how to benefit in countries under international sanctions. But the Iranian government is clearly worried about the prospect of new sanctions, he said, noting its intense diplomatic efforts to avert them.

The Revolutionary Guard Corps, which was established to protect Iran’s Islamic system, is obliged in peacetime to use its capabilities to advance the nation, its commanders say. Under President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Guard has vastly increased its business activities.

Working through its construction-sector arm, the Guard operates Tehran’s international airport, builds the nation’s highways and constructs communications systems. It also manages Iran’s weapons-manufacturing business, including its controversial missile program…

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