Daily Times

Home | Archives | Company Financials | Contact Us |  Subscribe | Sunday, May 19, 2013 

Main News
National
Islamabad
Karachi
Lahore
Briefs
Foreign
Editorial
Business
Sport
Entertainment
Advertise
 
Sunday Magazine
 
Boss
 
Wikkid
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Used
Web
 


 
Sunday, March 07, 2004 E-Mail this article to a friend Printer Friendly Version
Share | |

US will impose sanctions on Syria

* Administration officials claim announcement is ‘imminent’
* Washington accuses Damascus of sponsoring terrorism, occupying Lebanon


CRAWFORD: The United States will soon apply sanctions to Syria, under a 2003 law giving President George W Bush the authority to do so, a source close to the US administration said Saturday.

A White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity, would not specify the nature of the sanctions or when they would be imposed, but said they were expected soon.

Though the White House insists no final decisions have been made, senior administration officials on Friday informed Florida Republican Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a senior member of the House International Relations Committee, that an announcement was “imminent,” said her spokesman, Alex Cruz.

Several sources said the administration was leaning toward imposing economic rather than diplomatic sanctions under legislation signed into law by Bush in December. Washington accuses Syria of sponsoring terrorism, occupying Lebanon and failing to secure its border with Iraq while allowing anti-American fighters to cross into the country.

“Damascus’ destabilising behaviour in the Middle East has only gotten worse,” US Rep Eliot Engel, a New York Democrat, said in urging Bush to act.

The administration’s move against Syria would stand in stark contrast to President George W Bush’s decision to ease sanctions on Libya as a reward for scrapping its nuclear arms programmes. Bush has seized on Libya’s pledge to abandon weapons programmes as an example for other countries, including Syria.

The Syria Accountability Act bars trade in items that could be used in weapons programmes until the administration certifies Syria is not supporting terrorist groups, has withdrawn personnel from Lebanon, is not developing unconventional weapons and has secured its border with Iraq.

The law also authorises Bush to impose at least two other sanctions from a menu that includes barring US businesses from investing in Syria, restricting travel in the United States by Syrian diplomats, and banning exports of US products other than food and medicine to Syria. The legislation allows the White House to waive the sanctions, but a senior administration official said: “We will implement the Syrian Accountability Act.”

The official declined to say which sanctions would be put in place and when.

Several sources said the announcement was likely to be made next week or the week after.

The White House informed Ros-Lehtinen that the announcement was imminent in response to her letter urging Bush to expedite implementation of the sanctions. The congresswoman heads a House of Representatives subcommittee on the Middle East.

“They’re ready to go,” another source said of the sanctions, calling it “a serious signal to the Syrians that it needs to throw out terrorist groups.” Syria says its support for the Palestinian and Lebanese groups it calls freedom fighters is merely political and their only activity in Syria is speaking to media.

Allegations from Washington during the Iraq war that Damascus was helping aides of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein flee raised concern in the Arab world that Syria could be the next target of what the US calls its “war on terror.” US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld complained last month that Syria was not doing enough to stop guerrillas entering Iraq. —AFP\Reuters

Home | Foreign

Share | |
US will impose sanctions on Syria
China to build high tech weapons
No timetable for independence: Chen
Chirac opposes US plan for Arab democracy
Bush and Blair misled by intelligence on Iraq: Blix
Chalabi says ‘blame CIA, not me’ about WMD
Kerry says Bush shortchanging troops on gear
China looking for more friends
Russia rescues stranded polar scientists
Syrian Baath party celebrates alone after Baghdads fall
REGION: Tamil rebels dismiss breakaway commander
Bangladesh hit by fifth general strike
Held Kashmir JI heading for a split
Bangladesh ‘most violent for journalists’
Kashmiri women urged to fight for property rights
German envoy in Iran to leave for interfering
Maoists urge united front to topple monarchy
Cautious optimism over UN brokering in Myanmar
 
Daily Times - All Rights Reserved
Site developed and hosted by WorldCALL Internet Solutions


Used books in Pakistan   Web hosting in Pakistan