U.S. Treasury will oversee frozen Iranian funds when they’re released, Bessent says

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said once Iranian frozen assets are released, they will be overseen by Treasury and routed largely to U.S. agriculture, medicines.

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  • Iran’s assets that have been frozen will be overseen once released by the U.S. Treasury, the department’s Secretary Scott Bessent said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
  • Bessent and Trump said the funds will be used primarily to buy U.S. agricultural and pharmaceutical products.
  • Bessent didn’t specify what enforcement mechanisms will be applied to ensure the unfrozen money will be used for the intended purposes.

Treasury Secretary Bessent: U.S. Treasury will oversee frozen Iranian funds when they're releasedwatch nowVIDEO03:41Treasury Secretary Bessent: U.S. Treasury will oversee frozen Iranian funds when they’re releasedSquawk Box

The Treasury Department will oversee Iranian funds when they are released under President Donald Trump‘s interim Iran agreement, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Wednesday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”

“A very large percentage of it will go to buy U.S. foodstuffs and medicines,” Bessent said.

Bessent said the funds would be overseen by Treasury in the Middle East, suggesting the administration is trying to place guardrails around one of the most politically sensitive pieces of the agreement: Iran’s access to frozen assets.

The comments come as the White House faces backlash from some congressional Republicans over whether Trump’s deal gives Iran too much, including sanctions relief and access to frozen funds, in exchange for a temporary negotiating window.

The arrangement described by Bessent would also create a potential domestic economic argument for the deal: Some of the released funds could flow back to U.S. farmers, food producers and pharmaceutical companies if Iran is required or encouraged to use the money to buy U.S. goods.

But the mechanics remain unclear.

Bessent did not immediately specify how much money would be released, where the funds would be held, what role Iran would play in directing purchases or what enforcement tools Treasury would use to ensure the money is not diverted.

Administration officials have argued the interim deal is designed to stop hostilities and create a 60-day window for a broader agreement. Critics say the White House is offering too much up front while leaving major security questions unresolved.

Vice President JD Vance defended the agreement last week, insisting the U.S. is not sending taxpayer money to Iran and that Tehran would receive economic benefits only if it complies with the deal.

The administration’s explanation has already run into a competing account from Tehran. Iranian officials rejected the idea that Washington or its partners would dictate how Iran spends unfrozen assets, saying Tuesday any agricultural purchases would be based on price and quality rather than U.S.-imposed terms.

That disagreement also highlights the central unresolved question around whether Treasury will have legal control over the money once it is released, or whether the U.S. is describing conditions it still hopes to enforce through foreign banks, escrow accounts and sanctions pressure.

Trump said Tuesday that the money and sanctions relief being released by Treasury would go into a U.S.-controlled escrow account and be used for food and medical supplies from the United States, including corn, wheat and soybeans.

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