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Shedding Crocodile Tears While Collaborating With US-Led Sanctions

By Franklin Lamb

19 January, 2013
Countercurrents.org

Are the Arab League and Organization of Islamic Cooperation targeting Syria’s
civilian population?

Damascus -- One powerful image from Damascus that has become seared
into this observers mind these days is when I walk by a Western Union
office. Most of them remain open despite the brutal US-led sanctions which in
their pervasive effects target almost entirely the civilian population.
But all Western Union offices were closed last Thursday and Friday due to
heavy snowfall, some say the deepest here for more than a quarter century.
Still, some Syrians braved the extreme cold and could be seen huddled outside
some branches, evidently in vain hope that they might open and their
families might eat.

One of the few economic lifelines not yet cut by the ever strangling,
profoundly immoral and illegal US-led sanctions with their throat-hold
tightening around the civilian population in Syria in order to achieve regime
change, “WU” as it’s known, has become, for some, literally a lifesaver.
This is because its money transfer service is still allowing family and friends
from abroad to send in assistance to Syria for their desperate families caught
up in this regional contest between Resistance and a return to Western
hegemony.

Peering in the window or stepping inside a Western Union outlet in
Damascus, reminds this observer of scenes from the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange or a European bourse wherein traders wave pieces of paper
or other objects trying to get the attention of someone. But in Syria those
trying to submit their ten digit Money Control Transfer Number (MTCN)
numbers and ID’s in order to collect cash, are not wearing clothes from the
fashion houses. Rather, given the frigid temperatures and lack of mazot
(heating oil that 90% of the population here relies on for heat) they are tightly
bundled. Women and kids generally wrapped tight in thick head scarves.

Last week this observer went into the Western Union office in central
Damascus to collect some cash sent from Canada for a family that had
managed to escape from Aleppo. The place was packed but orderly. I smiled
to myself as I thought about my own country when sometimes during a
Black Friday type sale, the scene of waiting in queue collapses into yelling,
insults, fights, throwing objects, threats, all to save a few dollars or get one's
hands on the, soon to be trashed, "must have" sale item.

The stressed but committed staff behind the WU counter could not give
assurance how long I would have to wait but graciously did agree to take my
passport and I could return later. On arriving after about three hours, my
MCTN # had just been processed and I was in and out fast. I can’t imagine
that I will see a yellow and black Western Union sign ever again without
thinking about US sanctions targeting the Syrian civilian population.

An historical irony is that it was a Syrian gentlemen, Mr. Hiram Sibley, one
of the thousands of Syrians who emigrated to the United States in the
mid-19th Century (the first and largest Arab migration then and since came
from Syria) who in 1851 established the New York and Mississippi Valley
Printing Telegraph Company with the goal of creating one great telegraph
system with unified and efficient operations. Four years later Western Union
was born and became an American icon and thirty three years on it had
become one of the top ten companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange
the day it opened in 1888.

The reason Western Union is able to avoid the US-led sanctions that include
medicines and food (White House claims to the contrary notwithstanding),
is quite simply that the US Treasury Department cannot easily face the
domestic American political fallout from curtailing Western Union anywhere.

According to a July 2012 US Senate Banking Committee memo, were Treasury
to be seen as tampering with Western Union’s $7 billion annual revenues,
there would be a significant problem. Already there are growing complaints
from US businesses flooding the White House & Congress claiming that
sanctions imposed on Syria are costing American businesses hundreds of
millions of dollars in lost profits -- even more regarding US sanctions on Iran.
So to date the Office of Financial Assets Control (OFAC) at Treasury has kept
its hands off Western Union and this is good for Syrian civilians.

For these reasons a thin lifeline -- a reed really -- exists for many in Syria
with families and friends abroad able to use WU’s “Money in Minutes” to
help them. It’s a relatively small factor in the larger Syrian crisis but it does
help many.

Much more significant than Western Union remaining open, and the subject
of much current criticism here, is the lack of assistance to Syria’s severely
sanctioned civilian population from the Arab League and the Organization of
Islamic Cooperation, neither of which lack officials who are wringing their
hands in public these days, in mock anguish it is claimed, over their brothers
and co-religionists “victimization.”

Claiming solidarity with the Syrian people, on 11/12/2011 the Arab League
suspended the membership of Syria (Lebanon and Yemen voted no and Iraq
abstained) and cancelled its monitoring mission in Syria on 1/28/12. The
Organization of Islamic Cooperation suspended Syria's membership on
5/15/12 at a summit of Muslim leaders in Mecca. Saudi Arabia, the summit's
host, has led all Arab League and OIC calls for the Syrian rebel opposition
to be armed, which Foreign Minister Saud al-Fasial described in February
and since as "an excellent idea."

By their actions, the OIC and the Arab League are themselves sanctioning
the Syrian people in brutal forms and doing nothing to object to the immoral
and illegal aspects of the American sanctions. Both organizations stand
accused of abandoning their charters in order to maintain profitable relations
with NATO countries as they funnel large sums of money and weapons
to various militias inside Syria. It is their “agents,” the jihadist groups, who
have turned on the Syrian civilian population increasingly resorting to theft,
kidnapping for ransom, rape, sale of children and killing hundreds according
to UN agencies.

In one poignant interview near Omayyad Square the other day, a solemn, long
bearded Sunni Sheik told this observer that the American sanctions are also
directly targeting Islam because the sanctions constitute an attack on Islamic
values. When pressed for specifics, he reluctantly replied,
“Because your countries sanctions are impoverishing our people and forcing
our Muslim women into prostitution. These sanctions are also flooding the
streets with Muslim beggars, both adults and children. I am sure you have
seen them, here in Damascus, across Syria and in bordering countries. But
the claimed protectors of our holy sites are silent and shed only insincere
tears in public. But if they resisted these sanctions they could defeat them.
What is required in a 1970’s type Arab boycott of American and western
companies until these anti-Muslim sanctions are lifted.”

The honorable gentleman has a point.

The Arab League’s recent ministerial-level meeting held in Cairo was called
to focus on the Syrian refugees file. But the rather pathetic quick one day
deliberations ignored the causes of the suffering of the civilian population
as well as the fact that most of the 22 countries comprising the Arab League
have been a main cause behind the displacement of the Syrian civilian
population. Both the AL and the OIC stand accused here in Syria of
participation in the sanctions which are decimating the Syrian people's
livelihood. Some AL and OIC officials are shedding crocodile tears about
the miserable living conditions of the Syrian refugees “in spite of spending
millions on recruiting mercenaries and salifi-takfiries, training them and
purchasing weapons for the terrorists,” the Sheik explained.

One frustrated American NGO director, affiliated loosely with the World Food
Program, expressed her frustration: “If these organizations (AL and OIC)
wanted to aid Syrian refugees they should stop supplying the gunmen with
weapons and money and stop inciting sedition in Syria.”

The Arab League Secretary General, Nabil al-Arabi, still does not get it.

He used last week’s Arab League session to insist on foreign intervention
and regime change, renewing the AL demand that the UN Security Council
deploy international forces in Syria.

The Lebanese Foreign Minister, Adnan Mansour, offered his views of
the Syrian refugee’s displacement. Notable causations, he claimed, are the
flow of weapons and money into Syria, the entry of foreign gunmen and not
joining a political dialogue. To his credit, Mansour called on the AL and
OIC to
“shoulder their responsibilities towards the refugees through ensuring
their humanitarian, medical, livelihood, educational and services
requirements in order to ease their daily suffering.”

As for the Kuwaiti Minister, he considered that the US-led sanctions were
not a problem but rather that the suffering of the Syrian people was caused
by the failure of the UN Security Council to meet the demands of the AL for
immediate military intervention in Syria. He also insisted that Kuwait has
mobilized all its resources to ensure that financial and relief resources
alleviated the suffering of the Syrian refugees.

To date, the Syrian refugees, victims of US led and AL-OIC complicity, have
not received any of the assistance Kuwait, the Arab League or the
Organization of the Islamic Conference has promised. Rather, these
organizations appear to be propping up the US-led sanctions.

Meanwhile, according to officials, Syria's government has just authorized
the UN World Food Program to extend its reach in the country where
2.5 million people are suffering from hunger. Ertharin Cousin, spokeswoman
of the WFP, announced on Tuesdaythat Syria is allowing the organization to
work with local aid groups to reach more of those in need. To boost the
number of people receiving emergency assistance, the Syrian government last
week drew up a list of 110 local NGOs authorized to participate in the aid
effort.

WFP is working closely with the Syrian Arab Republic Red Crescent
Society (SARCS) which, thanks to more than 9000 volunteers, are operating
the following facilities to serve every Syrian and Palestinian without
consideration of sect or political views: Damascus 15, Damascus countryside
68, Suwayda 2, Homs 71, Idelb 2, Aleppo 185, al-Raqqah 52, al-Hasakah 52,
Dayr al-Zawr 4, and Quneitra 12.

Unlike the Arab League and the Organization of the Islamic Conference,
SARCS, the World Food Program, and more than 40 other NGO’s can be
observed any day of the week confronting and attempting to amelioratethe
profoundly immoral and illegal US-led sanctions -- manifold actions, not
crocodile tears -- in aid of the civilian population of Syria.

Franklin Lamb is doing research in Syria and is reachable c/o [email protected]

 




 

 


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