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U.N. Ban on Iran Arms Transfers


Updated April 30, 2020


Annex B of U.N. Security Council Resolution 2231 (July
17, 2015), which enshrined the multilateral Iran nuclear
agreement (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, JCPOA),
provides for a ban on arms transfers to or from Iran until
October 18, 2020. Major arms suppliers have apparently not
violated the restriction by transferring major combat
systems to Iran, but U.S. and U.N. officials and reports state
that Iran has not abided by the ban on exporting arms. The
Trump Administration and many in Congress advocate an
extension of the U.N. arms transfer ban, but two key
potential arms suppliers of Iran-Russia and China-are
veto-wielding members of the Security Council and support
the expiration of the ban.

Annex B also contains a ban, until October 18, 2023, on
supplying equipment that Iran could use to develop nuclear-
capable ballistic missiles, and it calls for Iran not to develop
ballistic missiles designed to carry a nuclear weapon. These
missile-related provisions are addressed separately in CRS
Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.

    Proisi-,, o   dhe Arms Transiier ~
Annex B of Resolution 2231 continued similar restrictions
in previous U.N. Security Council resolutions on Iran.
Resolution 1747 (March 24, 2007) contained a ban on
Iran's transfer of arms from its territory and required all
U.N. member states to prohibit the transfer of Iranian arms
to their nationals. Resolution 1929 (June 9, 2010) contained
a ban (Resolution 1747 had a voluntary restriction) on the
supply to Iran of any battle tanks, armoured combat
vehicles, large calibre artillery systems, combat aircraft,
attack helicopters, warships, missiles or missile systems as
defined for the purpose of the United Nations Register of
Arms or related materiel, including spare parts.... These
restrictions are restated in Annex B of Resolution 2231,
which supersedes all previous Security Council resolutions
on Iran. Annex B permits the importation and exportation
of such arms by Iran if the U.N. Security Council provides
advance approval on a case-by-case basis. Such approval
is virtually impossible; officials in both the Obama and
Trump Administrations have consistently said they could
not envision U.S. approval of arms transfers to or from Iran.

The Iran arms transfer ban in Resolution 2231 applies until
the date that is five years after the JCPOA Adoption Day
(Adoption Day was October 18, 2015, 90 days after the
passage of Resolution 2231). The restriction would expire
earlier if the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
were to issue a Broader Conclusion that all nuclear
material in Iran remains in peaceful activities.

U.S. and other Security Council member officials widely
interpret the restriction as inapplicable to the sale to Iran of
systems for purely defensive purposes. In 2007, Russia


agreed to the sale to Iran of the S-300 air defense system,
with a reported estimated value of about $800 million. The
two governments reportedly disagreed later over payment
and other terms, and Russia did not deliver it until
November 2016. A State Department spokesperson said in
May 2016 that [w]hile we're opposed to the sale, it is not
formally a violation [of 2231] because the S-300 is for
defensive uses only.

Figure I. Iran's Regional Allies


Source: Defense Intelligence Agency. Iran Military Power: 2019.

Effiects (fld a~k-,,,
The U.S. government assesses that the ban on selling arms
to Iran apparently has been effective. According to
Appendix J of the congressionally mandated Defense
Intelligence Agency (DIA) annual report on the military
power of Iran for 2019, released in November 2019, Iran
has not obtained any major combat systems from foreign
suppliers since the ban went into effect. It states that Iran
wants to purchase new advanced weapon systems from
foreign suppliers to modernize its armed forces, including
equipment it has largely been unable to acquire for
decades. The report adds that once the U.N. ban on arms
sales to Iran expires, Iran will be permitted to purchase
conventional systems it is unable to produce domestically,
such as advanced fighter aircraft and main battle tanks. Iran
is already evaluating and discussing military hardware for
purchase primarily from Russia and, to a lesser extent,
China. According to the report, Iran's potential
acquisitions after the lifting of UNSCR 2231 restrictions
include Russian Su-30 fighters, Yak-130 trainers, and T-90
MBTs (main battle tanks). Iran has also shown interest in
acquiring S-400 air defense systems and Bastian coastal
defense systems from Russia. For information on the
composition of Iran's forces, see Figure 2.


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