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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
13MAY

Iran wired its banks into Russia's

3 min read
20:00UTC

Iran's central bank confirmed the final stage of linking its Shetab network to Russia's Mir system on 19 June, with Governor Hemmati in Moscow and completion targeted for August.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran is completing Russia-routed payment rails by August, hedging the sanctions relief the deal has not delivered.

Iran's central bank confirmed on Friday 19 June that the third and final stage of linking Iran's Shetab interbank network to Russia's Mir payment system is being implemented, with completion expected around August 12. Shetab clears domestic card transactions inside Iran; Mir is the card scheme Moscow built after 2022 to operate outside Western payment rails. Governor Abdolnaser Hemmati had arrived in Moscow on 16 June and described the goal as "mechanisms independent of prevailing restrictions" 3.

The integration runs in three phases that read like a ladder. The 2024 pilot let Iranians withdraw roubles from Russian cash machines; the 2025 stage let Russians pay at Iranian tills with Mir Pay; the final stage now under way lets Iranian cardholders pay in Russian shops with their own cards 4. The two governments signed the underlying agreement in May 2022, so this is the completion of a long build, not a reaction to this week.

Hemmati flew to Moscow days after the Islamabad memorandum was signed, and the August completion target lands almost exactly on the close of the deal's 60-day nuclear window. Tehran is building the route around the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) waiver in parallel with the deal rather than waiting for the sanctions relief that the published memorandum left unsigned . That waiver still had not issued by 18 June . The hedge has a ceiling: Mir is itself sanctioned and shunned by banks far beyond Russia, so the rails carry Iran's trade to one isolated partner rather than back into the dollar system.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When countries face heavy economic sanctions, they lose access to the global financial system that runs on US dollars and uses American banks as the gateway. One response is to build alternative payment rails, networks that let you send money internationally without going through US-controlled infrastructure. Iran and Russia have both faced severe US sanctions in recent years. Since 2022, Russia has expanded its domestic card payment system, called Mir, after Western companies like Visa and Mastercard suspended their Russian operations. Iran runs its own domestic network called Shetab. By linking the two together in three stages, Iran and Russia are creating a corridor that lets their citizens and businesses transact without touching US banks or dollars. The third and final stage, announced on 19 June, will let Iranian cardholders pay in Russian shops using their own bank cards. For Tehran, the significance is that this infrastructure will be operational whether or not the Islamabad deal delivers its promised sanctions relief.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's central bank faces structural pressure from two directions simultaneously. Domestically, inflation ran at 77.2 per cent in the month to 20 May 2026, the highest since 1942, with the rial at a record low against the dollar. Internationally, OFAC designated four Iranian cryptocurrency exchanges on 2 June , closing the digital asset channel that had been the primary informal mechanism for defending the rial.

The Shetab-Mir integration addresses both pressures: it provides a formal, state-backed channel for trade settlement that OFAC designations cannot easily reach, and it allows the rial-rouble corridor to function without the cryptocurrency intermediaries Treasury has now shut down. Hemmati's Moscow arrival on 16 June, one day after the MOU signing, confirms Tehran is not sequencing the bypass after the deal but building it in parallel with the diplomatic track.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Shetab-Mir's August 2026 completion creates a functioning payment bypass timed to the end of the MOU's 60-day nuclear window; if OFAC sanctions relief does not arrive by then, Iran has a ready alternative rather than a negotiating need.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Washington's ability to use OFAC relief as a positive inducement in the second-phase MOU negotiations weakens if Shetab-Mir achieves operational scale before the nuclear deadline, since Tehran can credibly claim it no longer needs the waiver.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    The Iran-Russia payment integration sets a template for sanctioned states to build pre-emptive bilateral payment infrastructure rather than waiting for exclusion from SWIFT-equivalent systems; other OFAC-targeted governments may accelerate similar bilateral arrangements.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #133 · Lebanon froze the Iran deal

Sputnik Globe· 20 Jun 2026
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