Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 94— - IRAN THREAT REDUCTION AND SYRIA HUMAN RIGHTS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - SANCTIONS WITH RESPECT TO IRAN’S REVOLUTIONARY GUARD CORPS › § 8743
The President must send Congress a report no later than 120 days after August 10, 2012, and then every 180 days. The report must name any foreign government agency (not Iran) that the President finds knowingly and materially helped, sponsored, gave support or goods, or did a major deal with certain Iran-linked people. Those Iran-linked people are: (A) a foreign official, agent, or affiliate of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps that is designated under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act; (B) a foreign person designated and under financial sanctions in the Annex of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1737 (2006); Annex I of Resolution 1747 (2007); Annex I, II, or III of Resolution 1803 (2008); Annex I, II, or III of Resolution 1929 (2010); or any later related UN resolution or annex; or (C) anyone known to be acting for, directed by, or owned or controlled by a person in (A) or (B). Reports must be unclassified but may include a classified annex. The President may block a range of U.S. support to any agency named in the report if that support would help the agency keep doing the harmful activities. Limits can include stopping foreign assistance and most arms sales, denying U.S. government loans or credit, refusing licenses for defense or national-security controlled exports, opposing international financial institution help, and other steps under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Humanitarian aid, food, medicines, some agriculture credits, and transactions subject to Title V reporting are exceptions. The President can end the restrictions if the designated Iran-linked person is no longer designated, if an intermediary no longer acts for them, if the agency stops the harmful activity and guarantees it will not resume, or if removing the measures is vital to U.S. national security. If no measures are imposed, the next report must say why. “Appropriate congressional committees” means these Senate committees: Foreign Relations; Appropriations; Armed Services; Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs; Finance; and the Select Committee on Intelligence; and these House committees: Foreign Affairs; Appropriations; Armed Services; Financial Services; Ways and Means; and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. The law took effect August 10, 2012, and applies to activities on or after the later of 45 days after August 10, 2012, or 45 days after a person is designated under (A) or (B).
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 8743
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73