Sanctions  could target the companies that buy oil from Iran, putting massive  pressure on the Iranian government but also potentially driving up oil  prices.
NEW  YORK (CNNMoney) -- When President Obama upped the ante last week in U.S  efforts to isolate Iran, he also laid the groundwork for measures that  could cut off Iranian oil exports and cause a spike in crude prices.
The  U.S. government tightened restrictions on companies that provide Iran  with equipment and expertise necessary to run its vast oil and chemical  industry. 
But it it also declared the entire Iranian banking system, including its central bank, a "threat." 
And that caused oil experts to take notice.
Iran  conducts its 2.2 million barrel-a-day oil export business through its  central bank, using it as an intermediary between the national oil  company and its oil customers. 
Declaring the bank a threat opens  the door for the United States to impose sanctions on any company or  government that deals with the bank, which would include companies from  places like China, Japan and India that buy Iranian oil.
"It would  force any country to chose between doing businesses with Iran and doing  business with the United States," said Robert McNally, head of the  energy consultancy the Rapidan Group and a former adviser to President  George W. Bush. 
And that would be a direct attempt to cut off Iran's oil exports.
Iran is the world's third largest oil exporter behind Saudi Arabia  and Russia, according to the U.S. Energy Information Agency. The  Iranian government gets 50% of its revenues from its oil exports.
The country exports more oil than Libya, which is still mostly off the market.  Most of the world's remaining spare oil production capacity sits in  Saudi Arabia, and the Saudis would be hard pressed to make up for  another 2.2 million barrels a day.
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So curtailing Iran's exports would have the likely effect of sending the price of oil higher.
But some experts question the impact even these new stricter sanctions will have on Iran's ability to sell its oil. 
Sanctioning companies that buy Iranian oil would hobble Iranian oil exports but not stop them all together, they say. 
Oil  is a fungible commodity, meaning that it's possible to fill a tanker,  ship it to different ports, sell the oil to different firms and have it  end up on world markets with little trace of its origin.
"Iranian  oil would still flow," said Manouchehr Takin, an energy analyst at the  Center for Global Energy Studies in London. But this process is harder  and more expensive.
The administration is hoping that the threat  of these sanctions, combined with all the other sanctions that have been  announced over the years, will be enough to get the Iranian regime to  reconsider its nuclear program or to force a division within the  government leading to a new regime with more pro-Western policies. 
The current Iranian government has been sparing with the West over its nuclear program  for years. Iranian leaders contend the program is for peaceful  purposes, but most Western governments think it's designed to produce a  bomb. 
Plus, Iran's current leader has called for Israel's destruction.
But  diffusing the situation has proven difficult. Many military analysts  say a strike on Iran's well-fortified nuclear facilities would only  delay its program by a matter of months and risks rallying its citizens  around the current government.
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So  the Obama administration "is trying to build more internal fissures  that we can then leverage," said Juan Zarate, also a member of the  former Bush administration and now an analyst at the Center for  Strategic and International Studies. "The financial noose will continue  to tighten, and life will not get any easier for the Iranians."
But  the implementation of sanctions is no guarantee to bring about the  social change the West desires, either. Too many sanctions, like those  that restrict the supply of food, could solidify support for the regime  inside the country and push it to become even more aggressive.
Then there's the price of oil. What happens if the sanctions are too effective and Iran can't get its oil to market?
 
