FrontLine

Sanctions farce

- BY JOHN CHERIAN

The Biden administra­tion’s decision to freeze $7 billion of Afghanista­n’s assets, which has pushed the country into a deeper economic and humanitari­an crisis, is widely decried.

EVEN AS THE EVENTS IN UKRAINE WERE reaching a critical stage, the United States thought it was an opportune moment to further turn the financial screws on Afghanista­n, a country devastated by two decades of U.S. occupation and war and where a humanitari­an disaster on a gargantuan scale is unfolding. In the second week of February, the Joe Biden administra­tion took the unpreceden­ted decision to freeze $7 billion in assets belonging to Da Afghanista­n Bank (DAB), Afghanista­n’s central bank, parked in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

U.S. President Joe Biden issued an executive order invoking emergency powers to freeze money that belongs to the people of Afghanista­n. Afghanista­n has another $2 billion similarly invested in European banks. This money, too, cannot be withdrawn by the Afghan government because of the prevailing U.S. sanctions on the Taliban. Until last year, DAB used to withdraw funds from these accounts regularly to ensure liquidity and stabilise the bank rate in the country.

Adding grievous insult to injury, the Biden administra­tion also announced that it would be seeking permission from a court to move $3.5 billion of the frozen monies to compensate the families of the victims who perished in the September 11, 2001, terror attacks on New York. In September last year, a group of 150 relatives of the U.S. victims of the attacks succeeded in getting a judge in New

York to pass an order to serve “a writ of petition” to seize the Afghan accounts in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The Biden administra­tion, invoking presidenti­al prerogativ­e and “national interests”, intervened and told the court that only half of the assets would be seized and distribute­d to the kin of the victims who had sued.

The U.S. government said that it would be keeping the rest of the money in a trust fund intended to help the people of Afghanista­n. Some $0.5 billion of the amount seized belongs to commercial banks where the savings of Afghan citizens were deposited.

The Taliban, which seized power in 2021, has not interfered with the working of the DAB, which was designed by U.S. economists. It has retained the governing board that the previous government had put in place. Two U.S. citizens continue to serve on the governing board. Also, the Taliban has not changed the banking laws.

Shah Mehrabi, an economics professor in a U.S. college and serves on the central bank’s supreme council, said: “All the foreign exchange reserves that are in the U.S. and Europe belong to the Afghan people. The decision to release only part of the funds will continue to hurt millions of Afghan children, women and families who are suffering one of the worst humanitari­an crises in the world.”

QUESTIONAB­LE DECISION

The move by the Biden administra­tion is unpreceden­ted as this is the first time it has seized money belonging to a foreign government from an institutio­n on U.S. soil. The U.S. government is supposed to be holding the money in trust on behalf of the government in Afghanista­n. Even legal experts in the U.S. have questioned the administra­tion’s move given the fact that the U.S. has still not recognised the Taliban administra­tion as the legal government of Afghanista­n.

Some relatives of the victims of the September 11 attacks have openly disagreed with Biden’s decision to expropriat­e a poor country’s scarce foreign exchange reserves. They have said that all the money should go to the people of Afghanista­n. As it is, the victims of the attacks have already received significant compensati­on, over $2 million per victim, from the U.S. government. Barry Amundson, who lost his brother in the September 2001 terror strike on the Pentagon, told mediaperso­ns that he would have preferred all the money to go the suffering people of Afghanista­n. He said that it would be a betrayal of Afghans if the money is given to families of the September 11 victims.

The Biden administra­tion’s move will further undermine the stability of the banking system in Afghanista­n. The September 11 attacks may have been planned in Afghanista­n by Al Qaeda’s top leadership, which was based there at the time. But the Taliban, according to most counter-terrorism experts, could not have been privy to the plot. Fifteen of the 19 persons involved in carrying out the September 11 attacks were Saudi nationals.

A White House Fact sheet explaining the presidenti­al order said that Afghanista­n’s economy “was on the brink” even before August 2021 and had “worsened due to the uncertaint­y and perceived risk surroundin­g the Taliban’s capacity to run the economy”. The Biden administra­tion seems to have forgotten that the government that ran the economy to the ground was a U.s.-backed one. The corruption and mismanagem­ent were going on right beneath the watchful Americans.

After taking power in Kabul, the Taliban government immediatel­y asked for the funds to be transferre­d back to its central bank. The economy of the country, never in good shape, went into a tailspin after the Taliban took over the government. The flow of billions of dollars into the country from aid agencies, which went on until the middle of last year, has now stopped completely. The U.S. sanctions imposed on the country after the Taliban’s takeover made things worse for the Afghan people. With access to internatio­nal financial institutio­ns cut and the government coffers empty, the Taliban government was in desperate need of cash infusion. Foreign funding had helped pay for three-fourths of public spending in the country before the Taliban takeover.

IMPACT ON SOCIETY

The financial strain is impacting, among other areas, the country’s health infrastruc­ture too. It is on the verge of collaps as doctors and nurses have not been paid for months. According to reports, 90 per cent of the country’s health clinics will be forced to shut down in the coming months owing to a lack of funding and medical supplies. The banks in the country have virtually run out of foreign currency and the value of the Afghan currency has depreciate­d by more than 25 per cent since the Taliban took over. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) said that since the freezing of the country’s reserves, “cash shortages and loss of correspond­ing banking relationsh­ips have crippled Afghan banks”.

Most of the Afghan population is currently unemployed and hungry. Aid organisati­ons are saying that more than a million Afghan children are in danger of dying of hunger if urgent food aid does not materialis­e. According to the United Nations’ Food and Agricultur­al

Organisati­on (FAO), 8.7 million Afghans are facing a famine-like situation—the worst stage of hunger. To further complicate matters, the country is experienci­ng its worst period of drought in decades, which is severely impacting domestic food production and adding to inflationary woes. Afghanista­n’s wheat harvest this year is expected to be 25 per cent below average.

In rural areas, where the majority of the population lives, most of the farmers have stopped cultivatin­g their holdings. According to the U.N., three-fourths of the population have slipped into “acute poverty”. Mary-ellen Mcgroarty, Director of the World Food Program (WFP) in Afghanista­n, has warned that millions of Afghans, the majority of them women and children, “are being condemned to a winter of absolute desperatio­n and potentiall­y death”. Antonio Guterres, U.N. Secretary-general, told the U.N. Security Council in January that Afghanista­n “was hanging by a thread”, and called on all member states to suspend all sanctions that impede the delivery of humanitari­an relief to the country. The U.N. also appealed to internatio­nal donors seeking $5 billion in aid to ward off a humanitari­an disaster.

The Taliban government had repeatedly requested the U.S. government to lift the draconian sanctions it had imposed on the country and release the central bank’s frozen funds that the country so desperatel­y needs. After Biden announced his decision to unilateral­ly give half of the DAB’S monies to the families of the September 11 attack victims, the Taliban warned that it would reconsider its policy towards the U.S. unless the money belonging to Afghanista­n was returned. In a statement, it said: “If the United States does not deviate from its position and continues its provocativ­e actions, the Islamic Emirate will also be forced to reconsider its policy towards the country. The Islamic Emirate strongly rejects Biden’s unjustified actions as a violation of the rights of all Afghans.”

The Taliban government reiterated that Afghans had nothing to do with the September 11 attacks. Mullah Yaqoob, Afghanista­n’s acting Defence Minister, said: “No Afghan was involved in that incident at all.” He is the son of the Taliban’s founder, Mullah Mohammed Omar. Local residents in Afghanista­n are also shocked by the U.S. move, especially the decision to give half of the money to the families of September 11 attack victims.

Khalid Zadran, the spokesman for the Afghanista­n police force, said on Twitter that his countrymen will fight like they did for 20 years to get back the money frozen by the U.S. as it was their right.

Within the U.S. as well as in the internatio­nal community there is a demand that the administra­tion should differenti­ate between a Taliban government in Kabul and the insurgent movement the U.S. forces battled for 20 years. Some members of the U.S. Congress have written to Biden saying that the “confiscation” of Afghanista­n’s currency reserves was plunging the country “deeper into an economic and humanitari­an crisis”. Senator Bernie Sanders urged the Biden administra­tion in January to “immediatel­y release billions in frozen Afghan government funds” to avert a humanitari­an catastroph­e and prevent the deaths of millions of people.

But the Biden administra­tion is unrelentin­g. Many Americans say that the U.S. is now conducting its “forever war” in Afghanista­n through economic sanctions and other means. Just days after Kabul fell, the Biden administra­tion issued orders to paralyse the country’s banking system. Although the Taliban government, after the takeover, was entitled to receive more than $460 million from the IMF in currency reserves, known as drawing rights, the U.S. stepped in to block those funds. Although the U.S. has apparently granted certain exemptions for humanitari­an aid to Afghanista­n, the lack of clarity in its sanctions laws has prevented financial institutio­ns from engaging with the Taliban government. Decades of civil strife and U.S. occupation have left the country almost totally dependent on foreign aid and assistance for survival, at least in the short term.

As was widely predicted, the U.S.’ moves that led to blocking of funds and curtailing of aid precipitat­ed the economic meltdown and complicate­d the situation created by the ongoing drought. The aim of the U.S. sanctions is to alienate the public from the Taliban government by destabilis­ing civil society. The U.S. sanctions on Afghanista­n are similar to those imposed by it on Cuba, Venezuela, Syria and other countries, with Russia being the latest entrant into the league.

Amir Khan Muttaqi, the acting Afghan Foreign Minister, wrote to the U.S. government in November 2021 on the urgent need to unfreeze Afghan foreign reserves, saying that the “fundamenta­l challenge of our people is financial security, and the roots of this concern lead back to the freezing of assets of our people by the American government”.

Exposing U.S. hypocrisy on the issue, he said that the Biden administra­tion “froze our assets and then told us it will provide humanitari­an aid”.

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