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Wednesday 24 June 2020

As the US rolls out new sanctions on Assad, Syria braces for economic devastation

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his wife Asma vote in Damascus during parliamentary elections in April 2016.

Beirut, Lebanon (CNN) — The United States has rolled out fresh sanctions that aim to drive Syrian President Bashar al-Assad back to a UN-led negotiating table and threaten to devastate Syria’s already floundering economy.

On Wednesday the US State Department and Treasury Department released 39 targets for sanctions, including Assad and his wife Asma al-Assad, marking “the beginning of what will be a sustained campaign of economic and political pressure to deny the Assad regime revenue and support it uses to wage war and commit mass atrocities against the Syrian people,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement.

“We anticipate many more sanctions and we will not stop until Assad and his regime stop their needless, brutal war against the Syrian people and the Syrian government agrees to a political solution to the conflict as called for by UNSCR 2254,” he said, referring to a UN Security Council Resolution calling for a ceasefire and political settlement in Syria.

The first tranche of economic penalties come as part of the newly enforced Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act, which is expected to trigger the most wide-reaching and aggressive economic penalties ever imposed on Syria, potentially targeting its energy, construction and banking sector.

The bill was named after a former photographer for the Syrian military, codenamed Caesar, who leaked a trove of photographs showing dead and mutilated prisoners in Assad’s jails.


US Ambassador to the United Nations Kelly Craft told the Security Council on Tuesday the move was a bid to “prevent the Assad regime from securing a military victory, and to steer the regime and its allies back toward Special Envoy (Geir) Pedersen and the UN-led political process.”

Syria angrily hit back at the sanctions on Wednesday, saying the US move “exceeds the ugliest forms of lies and hypocrisy.”

In a statement to state-run news agency SANA, Syria’s Foreign and Expatriates Ministry also questioned US moral authority, in the light of recent widespread protests over the deaths of several black Americans in police custody. The US, it said, “is the last one who has the right to talk about the human rights, because the US administrations have established their state upon the culture of killing, disregarding any value of laws or conventions,” it said.

China and Russia also criticized the plan on Tuesday. China’s UN Ambassador Zhang Jun called the sanctions “inhumane.” Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia accused Washington of attempting to “overthrow the legitimate authorities of Syria,” according to Reuters.

The Caesar Act, a bipartisan Congress bill, has received broad support from Syria’s diaspora community, many of whom were driven into exile by Assad’s brutal oppression of largely peaceful protests that began in 2011. Assad has been repeatedly accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity in his military campaign to quash Syria’s armed opposition. He is also widely believed to have been behind multiple chemical attacks in rebel-held areas. Assad’s government has repeatedly denied the charges.

But even among Syria’s opposition, many expect that the US sanctions will also deal a crushing blow to Syria’s civilian population. The poverty rate stands at over 80%, according to the UN. Syria’s currency collapsed rapidly in recent months on the heels of an economic crisis in neighboring Lebanon, where many Syrian businessmen circumvented international sanctions during the war. Much of Syria lies in ruin.

“(Syria’s) economy has become something similar to the economy of the West Bank, an economy reliant on aid,” Syria analyst and nonresident scholar at the DC-based Middle East Institute Karam Shaar told CNN. “It’s not really a functional economy. It’s basically something that survives only because the West keeps injecting money into it.”

US sanctions threaten to cut off injections of cash from donations and remittances that keep the country afloat. Because the Caesar Act includes secondary sanctions — punishing non-US people and entities for transactions with regime-held Syria — they will likely create “phobia” and “panic from banks” around dealing with Syria, said Shaar, choking off financial transactions to the country.


Source: Tamara Qiblawi | CNN

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