By Andrea Shalal and Tim Hepher
WASHINGTON/PARIS (Reuters) - Boeing Co
A Boeing spokesman said the company received the license this week and would now contact officials in Iran to determine which parts were needed.
He said the license covered only components needed to ensure continued safe flight operations of older Boeing planes sold to Iran before the 1979 revolution, and did not allow any discussions about sales of new aircraft to Iran.
"It's very limited," said the spokesman.
The sales would be the first acknowledged dealings between U.S. aerospace companies and Iran since the 1979 U.S. hostage crisis led to U.S. sanctions that were later broadened during the dispute over Iran's nuclear activities.
Reuters reported in February that both Boeing and enginemaker General Electric Co
Iran agreed in November to curtail its nuclear activities for six months from January 20 in exchange for sanctions relief from Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States. The deal provides for the sale of parts to flag carrier Iranair, the fleet of which includes vintage Boeing and Airbus
No comment was immediately available from General Electric about the status of its application with the U.S. Treasury, which enforces international sanctions.
A Treasury spokesperson said the department does not comment on license applications or requests.
Iran says the sanctions have prevented it from renewing its fleet, forcing it to use sub-standard Russian aircraft and to patch up jets that have long since exceed their normal years of service. Since 1990 it has had more than 200 accidents, causing more than 2,000 deaths, according to official news agency IRNA.
Boeing said the license was granted under the temporary sanctions relief deal, and was aimed at helping improve the safety of Iran's aircraft.
"We take the safety of flight issue very seriously," said the spokesman. He had no immediate details on how many parts would be sold to Iran, or their potential value.
Analysts say the sales could help American companies position themselves for potential sales of new aircraft if a broader softening of sanctions is agreed.
A senior Iranian official told Reuters in November that Iran could require between 250 and 400 jets if and when sanctions are lifted completely.
(Additional reporting by Jason Lange in Washington and Babak Dehghanpisheh in Beirut; Editing by Sandra Maler)
Relacionados
- Sindicato justifica el ataque de ansiedad del agente que multó a Aguirre en la "presión mediática"
- Sindicato profesional justifica el ataque de ansiedad del agente que multó a Aguirre en la "presión mediática"
- Aguirre cuestiona que si se tiene un ataque de ansiedad por poner una multa se esté capacitado para agente de movilidad
- Aguirre puntualiza que no ha "arrollado a ningún agente" y "lamenta profundamente lo ocurrido"
- Un diputado del PSM afirma que Aguirre debe "dimitir" tras "arrollar" a un agente de movilidad