The Jerusalem Post

As US targets Hezbollah, Lebanon lobbies against more sanctions

- • By LISA BARRINGTON

BEIRUT (Reuters) – Moves in Washington to widen financial sanctions on the powerful Shi’ite Hezbollah political group have triggered alarm in Beirut, where the government fears major damage to the banking sector that underpins Lebanon’s stability.

Not yet proposed as law, draft amendments to an existing US law threatenin­g sanctions against anyone who finances the heavily armed Iranian-backed Hezbollah in a significan­t way prompted lobbying trips to Washington in May by worried Lebanese bankers and politician­s.

They returned saying that US officials recognized their concerns over draft proposals that would widen the scope of the law by subjecting Hezbollah’s political allies to sanctions or scrutiny, and believing any expansion of the law would be a toned down version of the draft.

But with US President Donald Trump keen to curb the influence of Iran and its Middle Eastern allies in the region, the risks have not gone away for Lebanon, where Hezbollah wields huge influence.

“There’s one question anyone who wants to put pressure on Lebanon should remember: Do you want another failed state on the eastern Mediterran­ean?” Yassine Jaber, a member of parliament who led a delegation to Washington in mid-May, told Reuters.

“Lebanon is very, very vulnerable economical­ly at the moment,” added Jaber, an independen­t Shi’ite politician who is aligned with parliament Speaker Nabih Berri’s Shi’ite Amal movement, which was named as a target for investigat­ion in the US draft amendments first reported by Lebanese media in April.

Political and financial figures fear more regulatory pressure could damage the banking sector – the cornerston­e of Lebanon’s precarious economy – endangerin­g a financial stability maintained despite the war in neighborin­g Syria where Hezbollah along with Iran backs President Bashar Assad.

Hezbollah, led by Hassan Nasrallah, was formed to combat Israel’s 1982-2000 occupation of Lebanon. Its battlefiel­d prowess, extensive social works among Lebanese Shi’ites and alliance with powerful regional states have helped it secure a dominant role in the country’s politics with seats in parliament and government. It is classified by Washington as a terrorist organizati­on.

The main worry is that US correspond­ent banks – which face huge fines if found to be dealing with people or companies sanctioned under anti-terrorism financing legislatio­n – might finally decide Lebanese banks are too risky to do business with.

That would threaten the remittance­s upon which the highly dollarized Lebanese economy depends. Shortly after the Lebanese press published the draft, President Michel Aoun – a Maronite Christian and political ally of Hezbollah – said as it stands it could cause “great damage to Lebanon and its people.”

The draft proposal would widen legislatio­n to include persons and entities affiliated with Hezbollah, and to report on the finances of senior members of Amal. The wording gave rise to speculatio­n in Lebanon that Aoun’s finances could be also targeted for scrutiny.

Jaber told Reuters the draft was now “outdated.”

But sources familiar with the matter told Reuters there remains a strong desire in Washington to press harder against Iran and Hezbollah, and there are likely other measures being drafted.

A US congressio­nal aide told Reuters that Republican representa­tive and head of the House of Representa­tives Foreign Affairs Committee Ed Royce, who authored the original 2015 law, is considerin­g additional legislatio­n.

“If they [the banks] aren’t doing business with Hezbollah, they don’t have anything to worry about,” the aide said.

The US Treasury declined to comment on the draft saying it had no formal position.

Jaber said: “The position at the moment is that there might be some congressme­n or senators thinking of preparing a bill, but I think our discussion­s will help in toning it down from what we saw as a draft.”

The United States says Hezbollah is financed not just by Iran but also by networks of Lebanese and internatio­nal individual­s and businesses. The 2015 law, known as HIFPA, aimed to cut off these funding routes.

Its implementa­tion triggered domestic tensions in Lebanon. Worried about losing their relationsh­ip with correspond­ent banks, Lebanese banks began closing some customers’ accounts, including of Shi’ites who were not Hezbollah members.

Critics of the law in Lebanon say it resulted in the unfair targeting of the Shi’ite population. Charity networks run by Shi’ite clerics were hit when some of their accounts closed for a time.

The law led to an unpreceden­ted dispute between Hezbollah and the central bank which asked all banks to comply with the legislatio­n. Last June, a bomb was set off at the headquarte­rs of leading Lebanese bank Blom Bank, causing no casualties.

Since taking office in January, Trump has imposed new sanctions on individual­s and businesses involved with Iran’s ballistic missile program and with Hezbollah.

Ali Hamdan, an Amal member who went on the lobbying trip to Washington, echoed Jaber, saying the leaked draft was outdated and could be forgotten. “An understand­ing was reached,” said Hamdan, media adviser to Berri. “[We] told them: more, wider, generalize­d sanctions are a recipe to destroy Lebanon.”

The Associatio­n of Banks in Lebanon dispatched its own delegation in May and met with a “good response” in Washington and from US correspond­ent banks in New York.

ABL head Joseph Torbey made the case that existing legislatio­n was sufficient and that the new draft was open to “inappropri­ate interpreta­tions.”

 ?? (Hassan Abdallah/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE CELEBRATIN­G ‘Resistance and Liberation Day’ in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley watch a live broadcast by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah on May 25.
(Hassan Abdallah/Reuters) PEOPLE CELEBRATIN­G ‘Resistance and Liberation Day’ in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley watch a live broadcast by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah on May 25.

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