WSJ What’s News - How Iraqi Banks Funneled Funds to Iran
Episode Date: September 9, 2024P.M. Edition for Sept. 9. U.S. officials say that Iraqi banks used a system created by the U.S. to send money to anti-American militia groups. WSJ’s David Cloud explains. And WSJ’s Jess Bravin dis...cusses how emergency appeals seeking to stop EPA rules are flooding the Supreme Court. Plus, mammograms aren’t always enough to catch cancer. The Journal’s Brianna Abbott explains a new FDA rule that can help women. Tracie Hunte hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Emergency appeals led by EPA challenges are flooding the Supreme Court.
And how Iraqi banks funneled money to Iran using a U.S. built system.
All over the Middle East, Iran seeks access to dollars and diverts that money to help
their militia allies.
Plus, the FDA introduces new guidance as mammograms aren't always enough to rule out cancer.
It's Monday, September 9th.
I'm Tracy Hunt for The Wall Street Journal.
This is the PM edition of What's News,
the top headlines and business stories
that move the world today.
The energy industry and Republican-led states
have flooded the Supreme Court with emergency appeals
seeking to block new Clean Air Act standards
from taking effect, even as there are against the rules proceed in lower courts.
This is becoming an increasingly common strategy as the court has become more willing to intervene
in cases much earlier than normal.
Jess Braven covers the Supreme Court for the Wall Street Journal and he joins us now.
So Jess, what's going on with all these appeals?
Well, these are what are called interlocutory or emergency appeals. Sometimes they call
this the shadow docket at the Supreme Court because a party wants the justices to intervene
well before a lower court has made its final decision. They want the Supreme Court to issue
an order that either makes something happen or stops something from happening while litigation
is going forward in the trial court or the appeals court.
The liberal members of the court have been the most unhappy about this new phenomenon
because often it's the conservative majority implementing some policy or procedure that
they disagree with.
Just today, Justice Elena Kagan, one of the court's liberal members, told an audience
at New York University that while sometimes these emergency orders are justified, many times they don't produce the court's best work because the justices
have to reach a decision without the full briefing and trial records that come in the
normal course of litigation. She said that maybe it's time to slow down the flow of emergency
or shadow applications to the Supreme Court.
What kinds of cases are we seeing right now?
Well, there are a lot of cases.
Some almost always get denied.
That's usually a prisoner or a non-citizen immigrant who wants to avoid deportation.
Justice is not very sympathetic to those cases and they usually are denied.
But the Supreme Court is becoming much more receptive to cases filed by state governments,
particularly Republican-led state governments, and by industry that's unhappy with regulations that the Biden administration has been putting out.
What are environmental advocates saying about all this?
Well, they're unhappy, obviously.
What's the emergency?
These regulations don't go into effect until the 2030s.
So why does the Supreme Court have to intervene at this point?
Industry says it's because preparing to comply with the regulations
down the road imposes costs on us and we don't want to have to pay those costs if we expect to
ultimately win the case. Jess Braven is a Wall Street Journal Supreme Court correspondent.
In business news, Norfolk Southern Chief Executive Alan Shaw is expected to depart the company
as soon as this week amid a board investigation into an alleged relationship he had with an
employee at the railroad. That's according to people familiar with the matter. Norfolk
said that its board had hired a law firm to conduct an independent investigation of the
allegations. Shaw didn't respond to requests for comment.
Norfolk said it wouldn't comment further until the probe was complete.
As we mentioned in our morning show,
Apple announced its new AI-enabled iPhones today.
Demand for the new phones will offer another test of market appetite for
the technology.
The company's rivals have spent billions investing in models
that can chat and interact with users in human-like ways
and write and produce images and animations.
Yet, investors have grown weary of AI spending this year
as many companies have yet to show a clear path to profitability.
A Move Higher in U.S. stocks today has some investors breathing a sigh of relief after
last week's brutal sell-off.
The Dow ended up 1.2 percent, while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite were both up
1.16 percent. Coming up, why U.S. officials say money from Iraq was funneled to Iran.
That's after the break.
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Around two decades ago, as the U.S. occupied Iraq, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
played a key role in processing Iraq's oil earnings and international transactions.
Now American officials say that this same system set up by the US and Iraq
is being used to funnel funds to Iran.
The officials say that among Iraqi banks overall, as much as 80% of the more than
$250 million in dollar wire transfers flowing through them on some days were untraceable.
They say that some portion of that amount went secretly to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps and the anti-U.S. militias it supports.
David Cloud is the journal's deputy national security editor in Washington.
He spoke to my colleague Pierre Bienneme about the path these illicit transfers took.
David Cloud, Journalist, National Security Editor, Washington, D.C. about the path these illicit transfers took. Bankers who were working on behalf of Iran
began generating billions and billions of dollars
in false and fraudulent transactions
that really had no economic purpose
other than to tap funds that were held at the Fed
and to send them to unknown recipients,
including Iran, were told by US officials.
Nefarious people and US adversaries and militia groups and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps, Iran's main militia group.
By 2013 and 14, a bunch of Iraqi banks jumped in and it went on for close to a decade with
very few restraints.
And the US had a general idea it was going on, but it had bigger fish to fry in Iraq.
Iraq, as many people will recall, had an insurgency, then there was ISIS.
The US interest was in keeping Iraq stable.
So it put off dealing with this issue of diversion of dollars from Iraqi banks until just in
recent years and in the last 18 months, really.
What has the US done to close off these sources of funding for groups that it labels as terrorists?
And were those moves effective?
So beginning in late 2022, the US with very little public notice began banning Iraqi banks
from doing dollar transactions.
It began with four banks in November of 2022, and since then has banned a total of 27 Iraqi
banks from access to the dollar and pressuring the Iraqi central bank to impose much stricter
restrictions and disclosure requirements on wire transfers out of its banks.
So now Iraqi banks have to disclose exactly where the money's going, which they didn't
have to do before.
And if it's disclosed that it's going to some nefarious actor or someone who seems like
it could be a nefarious actor, the transactions are blocked.
The US says that that has succeeded in large measure in closing off this particular avenue
for Iran.
But there are plenty of other ways that it gets dollars, including selling its own oil in violation of sanctions and getting dollars from those sales and using them in
the same way that they use the dollars that they got from Iraqi banks.
And how was that money being used?
The U.S. is very confident that the money was used to benefit the IRGC, something called
the Quds Force, which is Iran's overseas militia group that
sponsors similar proxy groups in places like Iran, places like Syria, Lebanon and
Yemen. So all over the Middle East, Iran seeks access to dollars and diverts that
money to help their militia allies. And what the Quds Force and the IRGC and
Iraqi militia groups want to buy are weapons and
components for weapons, including components for drones, including potentially components
for missiles.
That was The Wall Street Journal's Deputy National Security Editor, David Cloud, speaking
to my colleague, Pierre Bieneming.
The Iraqi Central Bank has announced plans to do away with its current system for wiring
dollars overseas by the end of this year. The bank didn't respond to requests for comments.
Israel and Hamas have been at war for nearly a year. With that milestone coming up, what
do you want to know about the ceasefire talks and what it could take to free the hostages and end the fighting. Send a voicemail to wnpod at wsj.com
or leave a voicemail with your name and location at 212-416-4328.
We might use it on the show.
For the nearly half of American women with dense breasts, a mammogram might not be enough
to spot cancer early.
That's because dense breast tissue can hide tumors from view.
So starting tomorrow, the Food and Drug Administration will require medical providers to notify women
whether their mammograms reveal dense breast tissue, so they might speak to
their doctors and seek additional tests.
Joining me now is Wall Street Journal health reporter Brianna Abbott.
Brianna, how can this new guidance help save lives?
The crux of the issue is that we have evidence that shows that additional testing with, say,
ultrasound or MRIs or a couple other modalities can find more cancers and they can find them
earlier. But the issue is, is we just haven't run these large clinical trials that really
show that they reduce breast cancer deaths. So without this data that sort of definitively
shows that it saves lives, medical groups disagree on if women should get additional
testing for this. So it really ends up being
an individual choice for the time being between a woman and her doctor.
Nicole So a woman gets this information,
she has dense breasts, what are her next steps? What should she do with that information?
Dr. Julie Kinn So what she should definitely do is start by talking to her doctor about it
and sort of figuring out how dense her breasts are.
And also another thing that can be done that's really helpful is sort of calculating her risk.
Basically take in all of her other risk factors like age, family history, reproductive history
to figure out her chances of developing breast cancer.
And so with all of that information together, you can sort of make a decision on whether or not you want
additional screening. There are two big hangups with this. One is that not necessarily all
doctors know about all of these pros and cons. And the second is insurance coverage because
not all insurance providers pay for this additional screening. So right now, advocates are sort
of excited that this dense press
notification is nationwide so that now women will get this information but the
path forward isn't always clear. Brianna Abbott is a Wall Street Journal
reporter covering health. And that's what's news for this Monday afternoon.
Today's show was produced by Pierre Bienneme and Anthony Bansi with
supervising producer Michael Cosmitis.
I'm Tracy Hunt for The Wall Street Journal. We'll be back with a new show tomorrow morning.
Thanks for listening.