The World Must End The US’ Illegal
Economic War
By Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers
January 14, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The
United States is relying more heavily on illegal
unilateral coercive measures (also known as economic
sanctions) in place of war or as part of its
build-up to war. In fact, economic sanctions are an
act of war that kills tens of thousands of people
each year through financial strangulation. An
economic blockade places a country under siege.
A recent example is the increase in economic
measures being imposed against Iran, which many
viewed as more acceptable than a military attack. In
response to Iran retaliating for the assassination
of General Qassem Soleimani and seven other people,
Iran used ballistic missiles to strike two bases in
Iraq that house US troops. President Trump responded
by saying he would impose more sanctions on Iran.
Then he ended his comments by urging peace
negotiations with Iran. The United States needs to
understand there will be no negotiations with Iran
until the US lifts sanctions that seek to destroy
the Iranian economy and turn the people against
their government.
The sanctions on Iran have been in place since
the 1979 Iranian Revolution, which made that country
independent of the United States. Iran is not the
only country being sanctioned by the United
States. Samuel Moncada, the Venezuelan ambassador to
the United Nations, speaking to the summit of the
Non-Aligned Movement of 120 nations on October 26,
2019, denounced the imposition of sanctions by the
US, as “economic terrorism which
affects a third of humanity with more than 8,000
measures in 39 countries.”
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It is time to end US economic warfare and
repeal these unilateral coercive measures,
which
violate international law.
Sanctions are war. From havaar.org.
Sanctions Are A Weapon of War
The United States uses sanctions against
countries that resist the US’ agenda. US
sanctions are designed to kill by destroying an
economy through denial of access to finance, causing
hyperinflation and shortages and blocking basic
necessities such as food and medicine. For example,
sanctions are expected to cause
the death of tens of thousands of Iranians by
creating a severe
shortage of critical medicines and medical
equipment everywhere
in Iran.
Muhammad Sahimi
writes that in a “letter published by The
Lancet, the prestigious medical journal,
three doctors working in Tehran’s MAHAK Pediatric
Cancer Treatment and Research Center warned
that, ‘Re-establishment of sanctions, scarcity
of drugs due to the reluctance of pharmaceutical
companies to deal with Iran, and a tremendous
increase in oncology drug prices [due to the
plummeting value of the Iranian rial by 50–70%],
will inevitably lead to a decrease in survival of
children with cancer.'”
Diabetes, multiple sclerosis,
HIV/AIDS, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, and asthma
affect over ten million Iranians who will find
essential medicines impossible to get or available
only at high prices. The US claims that food and
medicines are excluded from sanctions but in
practice, they are not because pharmaceutical
companies fear sanctions being applied to them over
some technical violation and Iran cannot pay for
essentials when banks can’t do business with
it. European nations failed
to persuade the Trump administration to ensure
that essential medicine and food were available to
Iranians.
In Venezuela, due
to the sanctions, 180,000 medical operations
have been canceled and 823,000 chronically ill
patients are awaiting medicines. The Center for
Economic and Policy Research found sanctions
have deprived Venezuela of “billions of dollars
of foreign exchange needed to pay for essential and
life-saving imports,” contributing to 40,000 total
deaths in 2017 and 2018. More than 300,000
Venezuelans are at risk due to a lack of access to
medicine or treatment. Economists warn US
sanctions could cause famine in Venezuela.
Sanctions
also cause shortages of parts and equipment
needed for electricity generation, water systems,
and transportation as well as preventing
participation in the global financial market.
Sanctions, which are
illegal under the UN, OAS and US law, have
caused
mass protests in Venezuela against the US.
Sanctions against Iran and Venezuela could be a
prelude to military attack, i.e. the US weakening a
nation economically before attacking it. This is
what happened in Iraq. Under pressure from the
United States, on Aug.
2, 1990, the UN Security Council
passed sanctions that required countries to
stop trading or carrying out financial transactions with
Iraq. President George H.W. Bush said the UN
sanctions would not
be lifted “as long as Saddam Hussein is in
power.” The US continued to pressure the
increasingly skeptical Security Council members into
compliance even though hundreds of thousands of
children were dying. In 1996, then-U.S. Ambassador
to the UN Madeleine Albright was asked about the
death of as many as 500,000 children due to lack of
medicine and malnutrition exacerbated by
the sanctions, and she brutally replied, “[The] price
is worth it.” Sanctions were also used against
Libya and Syria before the US attacked them.
This is consistent with the US ‘way of war’
described by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz in “An
Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States,”
which describes frontier counterinsurgency premised
on annihilation including the destruction of food,
housing, and resources as well as ruthless
militarism. The US has waged a long-term economic
war against Cuba (sanctions in place since 1960),
North Korea (first sanctions in the 1950s, tightened
in the 1980s), Zimbabwe (2003) and Iran (1979)
Sanctions hurt civilians, especially the most
vulnerable – babies, children, the elderly and
chronically ill – not governments. Their intent is
to shrink the economy and cause chronic shortages
and hyperinflation while ensuring a lack of access
to finance to pay for essentials. The US then blames
the targeted government claiming that corruption or
socialism is the problem in an effort to turn the
people against their government. This often
backfires as people instead rally around the
government, quiet their calls for democracy and work
to
develop a resistance economy.
Stop Sanctions destroying lives from
BrightonAndHoveNews.org.
The Movement to End Sanctions
In recent years, a movement has been building to
end the use of illegal economic coercive measures.
The movement includes governments coming together in
forums like the
Non-Aligned Movement, made up of countries that
represent 55 percent of the global population, as
well as UN member-states calling for international
law and the UN Charter to be upheld and
social movements organizing to educate about the
impact of sanctions and demand an end to their use.
This June, the Non-Aligned
Movement called for the end of sanctions against
Venezuela.
Popular Resistance is working with groups around
the world on
the Global Appeal for Peace, an initiative to
create a worldwide network of people and
organizations that will work together to oppose the
lawless actions of the United States, and any
country that acts similarly. A high priority is
opposing the imposition of unilateral coercive
economic measures that violate the charter of the
United Nations. The UN and its International Court
of Justice have been ineffective in holding the US
accountable for its actions. No one country or one
movement has the power alone to hold the United
States accountable, but together we can make a
difference.
Join this campaign here.
With 39 countries targeted with sanctions, and
other countries impacted because they cannot trade
with those countries, nations are challenging the
US’ dollar domination. Countries are seeking to
conduct trade without the dollar and are no longer
treating the US dollar as the world’s reserve
currency while also avoiding Wall Street. The
de-dollarization of the global economy is a
boomerang effect that is hastening due to the abuse
of sanctions and will seriously weaken the US
economy.
Foreign Minister
Zarif, who describes sanctions as “economic
terrorism,” warned that “the excessive use of
economic power by the United States, and the
excessive use of the dollar as a weapon in US
economic terrorism against other countries, will
backfire.” As the blowback continues to grow,
the negative impact on the US economy may force the
US to stop using sanctions. The end of dollar
domination will add to the demise of the failing US
empire.
End the Deadly Sanctions banner on the
Venezuelan Embassy in Washington, DC. From
the Embassy Defense Collective.
Time to End the Use of Illegal
Economic Sanctions
The combination of countries acting against US
sanctions, and people’s movements pressuring the US
government has the potential to end the abuse of
sanctions. The
EU has moved to blunt the impact of the
sanctions against Iran by creating an
alternative to the US-controlled SWIFT system
for trade. This is
spurring the end of the dollar as the reserve
currency. Some officials in the EU have called for
retaliatory sanctions against the US.
Trump left a small opening for potential
diplomacy with Iran that could lead to the end of
sanctions against that country. Trump bragged about
the US being the number one oil and gas producer,
taking credit for an Obama climate crime, and
therefore no longer needing to spend hundreds of
millions a year to have troops in the Middle East.
He concluded with a message to the “people and
leaders of Iran” that the US was “ready to have
peace with all those who seek it.” He said the US
wanted Iran to have a “great and prosperous future
with other countries of the world.”
That future is only possible if the US moves to
end the sanctions against Iran. Iranians have
learned the US cannot be trusted. Iran lived up to
the requirements of the Iran nuclear deal, the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action, but Trump did not when
he withdrew from it and re-instated
draconian sanctions lifted by Obama. Trump added
even move sanctions. This also angered
European allies who had negotiated the agreement
and
were put in the position of being subservient to
the US or going against it. To regain Iran’s trust,
the US needs to make a good-faith gesture of ending
punitive economic measures.
North Korea, which has been sanctioned by the US
longer than any other country, had a similar
experience after they reached an agreement with the
United States in 1994 under the Clinton
administration. The George W. Bush administration
wanted to put in place a national missile defense
system but the agreement with North Korea blocked
that.
John Bolton and Dick Cheney falsely accused North
Korea of violating the agreement, increased
sanctions against it and claimed it was part of the
Axis of Evil, along with Iran, and Iraq. North
Korea, like Iran, learned they cannot trust the
United States.
Sanctions are causing thousands of deaths in
North Korea. Now,
China and Russia are allied with North Korea and
are urging relief from the US sanctions. Russia and
China have also ignored US sanctions against
Venezuela and continue to do business with it.
On December 17, the Senate passed a Sanctions
Bill that put in place sanctions against
corporations working with Russia to develop gas
pipelines to Europe. The action is
naked US imperialism seeking to prevent Russia
from being the main natural gas exporter to the EU
market and to replace it with more expensive
US-produced gas, a move to save the
financially-underwater US fracking industry. Russia,
Germany, and others have defiantly told Washington
its weaponizing of economic sanctions will not halt
the gas pipeline construction.
The indiscriminate,
illegal and immoral use of sanctions is an act
of war. Unless they are authorized by the United
Nations, unilateral coercive measures are illegal. A
critical objective of the peace and justice movement
in the United States, working with allies around the
world, must be to end this terrorist economic
warfare. The US economy currently depends on
financial hegemony and war. The slow, steady
collapse of the dollarized economy means the 2020s
will be the decade US domination comes to an end.
The US must learn to be a cooperative member of the
global community or risk this isolation and
retaliation.
This article was
originally published by "Popular
Resistance " -
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