US sanctions are part of a multi-front war on
Syria, and its long-suffering civilians are the
main target
By Eva Bartlett
July 14, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The US is
waging multiple fronts of war against Syria,
including brutal sanctions, while claiming
concern over the wellbeing of Syrian civilians –
the vast majority of whom are suffering as a
direct result of US policies.
On June 17, the US implemented the Caesar
Act, America’s latest round of draconian
sanctions against the Syrian people, to
“protect” them, America claims. This, after
years of bombing civilians and providing support
to anti-government militants, leading to the
proliferation of terrorists who kidnap,
imprison, torture, maim, and murder the same
Syrian
civilians.
Just weeks after these barbaric sanctions
were enforced, cue American crocodile
tears about Syrian suffering, and claims
that Moscow and Damascus are allegedly
preventing the delivery of humanitarian aid.
More hot air from American hypocritical talking
heads who don’t actually care about Syrians’
wellbeing.
America trigger-happily sanctions many
nations or entities that dare to stand up to its
hegemonic dictates. The word “sanctions”
sounds too soft – the reality is an all-out
economic war against the people in targeted
nations.
Sanctions have, as I
wrote last December, impacted Syria’s ability to
import medicines or the raw materials needed to
manufacture them, medical equipment, and machines and
materials needed to manufacture prosthetic limbs, among
other things.
Syria
reports that the latest sanctions are already
preventing civilians from acquiring “imported drugs,
especially antibiotics, as some companies have withdrawn
their licenses granted to drug factories,” due to
the sanctions.
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In Damascus, pharmacies I’ve stopped into, when I ask
what some of the most sought-after medications are,
hypertension medications are at the top.
But sanctions have yet another brutal effect: they
wreak havoc on the economy.
The destruction of Syria’s economy is something US
envoy for Syria, James Jeffrey, boasted about,
reportedly
saying that the sanctions “contributed to the
collapse of the value of the Syrian pound.”
The website
Sanctions Killnotes:
“Currencies are devalued and inflated when
sanctions are levied. Countries are pressured to stop
doing business with targeted countries. Sanctions
violate international law, the UN charter, Geneva and
Nuremberg conventions because they target civilians by
economic strangulation, creating famines,
life-threatening shortages, and economic chaos.”
So you have Western hypocritical talking heads
pretending they want to get aid to Syrian civilians
while literally cutting them off from medicine and the
ability to purchase food.
Resource theft and arson
But these crimes against humanity don’t suffice for
America. The US occupation troops and their Kurdish
proxy forces (the SDF) are plundering Syria’s oil
resources to the tune of $30 million a
month as of last October, according to Russian
military estimates.
In early July, SANA
reported another convoy leaving Syria to Iraq,
loaded with oil thieved from areas under US occupation.
Terrorists and US proxy groups are also thieving
Syria’s cotton, olives, wheat, and
flour.
Further, Syria
accuses the US of deliberately setting fire to crops
using Apache-dropped thermal balloons.
Civilians from affected areas near Turkish occupation
posts likewise
blame Turkish forces for setting fires and firing
live ammunition upon those who attempt to extinguish the
fires, farmers literally watching their livelihoods go
up in
flames. The Hasakah Agriculture Directorate director
likewise blames
Turkey for arson of the crops.
Turkish occupation forces are also accused of cutting
water
supplies at Alouk water pump station, depriving one
million people in the Hasakah region of drinking and
agricultural water, with no condemnation from
the Security Council.
The poverty and suffering Syrians are enduring these
days is unbearable, with prices of basic goods doubled
and tripled from just a few months ago, turning what
were affordable items into luxuries, particularly for
the 7.9 million food-insecure Syrians.
But alarmist Western media and representatives omit
the context: the nearly 10 years of war on Syria; the
deliberate targeting by terrorists and by US and Turkish
occupation forces, and Israel, of Syria’s
infrastructure; the looting of oil, wheat and cotton,
even allegedly stealing parts of an Idlib power
plant for scraps sale in Turkey.
Likewise, Aleppo’s heavy industry was thieved during
the years when terrorists occupied the industrial zones
of the city. Heavy machinery was reportedly
trucked in broad daylight to Turkey.
With all of these factors, of course there is poverty
and a chaotic economy.
A safe resolution rejected
Recently, the UNSC passed a resolution to maintain
one humanitarian border crossing from Turkey into Syria,
the Bab al-Hawa crossing.
Prior to that, Russia had
proposed a resolution enabling the safe delivery of
humanitarian aid from within Syria.
On July 11, Russia’s Permanent Mission to the UN
issued a
statement again noting the need to phase out
cross-border deliveries, as the Syrian government has
regained much of the territories previously occupied by
terrorist factions, and deliveries must be made from
within Syria.
The UNSC resolution that passed, however, continues
the delivery of aid via Turkey, delivering to the hands
of Al-Qaeda and other terrorist
groups occupying Idlib. It is with these people the
US aid ends up when delivered, from Turkey, not from
Syrian territory.
Given that the US has supplied weapons to
anti-government extremists in Syria
before, it is not illogical to believe they hoped to
funnel still more weapons in under the pretext of
“aid” deliveries.
Russia’s statement also noted the lack of UN presence
in the Idlib de-escalation zone, saying: “It’s not a
secret that the terrorist groups, listed as such by the
UN Security Council, control certain areas of the
de-escalation zone and use the UN humanitarian aid as a
tool to exert pressure on [the civilian] population and
openly make profit from such deliveries.”
This is what Russia and China opposed, not the
delivery of aid.
Those are details which US Ambassador Kelly Craft
slyly omitted when she
spoke of callousness and dishonesty being an
established pattern. Her verbal guns were aimed at Syria
and Russia, but her choice of words perfectly describes
US policy towards Syrians.
One only needs to look at US policy towards
displaced Syrians in Rukban Camp to see that the US
has actively
worked to prevent aid deliveries there and prevent
Syrians from being evacuated from there. Or the lack of
US
outcry at Turkey’s prevention of humanitarian
convoys from reaching Idlib areas, which while scheduled
for last April still hasn’t
been successful.
On the other hand, on July 4 the WHO acknowledged the
Syrian-Russian delivery of 85 tons of medicines and
medical supplies from Damascus to Al Hasakah. On July 9,
the Russian Reconciliation Center noted that 500 food
packages (2,424 tons) were delivered to Idlib province
and Deir-ez-Zor province.
I wonder how many tons of actual aid the US would
send...
In case it isn’t yet clear, America is weaponizing
and politicizing aid, as it tried to do in
Venezuela last year. American representatives
posture and bellow, and Russia and Syria quietly go
about actually delivering aid to needy Syrians.
The Russian post-resolution statement also critically
noted the brutal impact of sanctions on Syria, which, as
detrimental to Syrians’ wellbeing as they are, somehow
don’t merit the feigned concern of representatives
like Craft.
The statement said:
“These coercive measures seriously undermine not
only the socio-economic situation in Syria, but also
impede activities of many humanitarian NGOs that are
ready to help the population in territories controlled
by Syrian official authorities.”
If America truly wanted to alleviate the suffering of
Syrians, all sanctions against the country and people
would be immediately lifted.
Eva Bartlett is a Canadian
independent journalist and activist. She has spent
years on the ground covering conflict zones in the
Middle East, especially in Syria and Palestine
(where she lived for nearly four years). Follow her
on Twitter @EvaKBartlett
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