President Bush said Thursday that the United States would freeze the property
and assets of anyone trying to undermine Lebanon’s democratically elected
government — a move intended as a sharp warning to Syria and its ally Hezbollah.
The announcement, in an executive order and an accompanying letter to Congress,
reflects heightened concern in Washington that Syria is trying to reassert
control over Lebanon. It comes a little more than a month after the
administration announced that it was enacting a travel ban, barring “those who
have contributed to the breakdown of the rule of law in Lebanon,” possibly
including leading Syrian intelligence officials, from entering the United
States.
Taken together, the steps are an effort to ratchet up pressure on Syria at a
time when the administration contends that it is helping to fuel the insurgency
in Iraq, as well as creating instability in Lebanon. Mr. Bush’s order deems
interference in Lebanon’s government to be an “extraordinary threat to the
national security and foreign policy of the United States,” and declares it a
“national emergency.”
Administration officials say they are especially concerned that the fragile
democratic government in Lebanon, headed by Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, could
splinter if the Lebanese president, Émile Lahoud, who has close ties to Syria,
tries to establish an alternate government. That concern has grown in recent
months, said an administration official involved in formulating the executive
order.
“We think measures like this visa ban and the executive order not only allow us
to target people who are behind this and complicit in it, but they raise the
cost of going along with it,” said the official, who did not have authorization
to speak on the record. “There are key figures in Lebanon who could go one way
or the other, who are sitting on the fence, and this is a way to try to deter
them.”
The White House, which has long regarded Syria as a state sponsor of terrorism,
is particularly incensed over Syrian support for Hezbollah, the militant group
in Lebanon that waged war against Israel last summer. In the months since,
Lebanese cabinet members aligned with Syria have resigned from the government,
and the United Nations Security Council has voted to form a special tribunal to
try Syrians suspected in the 2005 assassination of Rafik Hariri, the former
Lebanese prime minister.
Mr. Hariri, who was killed in a car bombing, had opposed Syria’s strong
political and military presence in Lebanon. Protests after his death led to the
withdrawal of Syrian troops, who had been in Lebanon since the 1970s.
The White House would not identify particular targets of the executive order,
but they are likely to include those who were potentially under the travel ban.
Among them was Gen. Asef Shawkat, a leading Syrian intelligence official and the
brother-in-law of President Bashar al-Assad of Syria. General Shawkat has been
implicated in the murder of Mr. Hariri.
Experts say it is unclear what effect, if any, freezing property and assets will
have. Jon B. Alterman, a Middle East expert at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies in Washington who visited President Assad about a month
ago, said Mr. Assad and his associates were deeply concerned that the Siniora
government could threaten his own.
“They are concerned that a hostile government in Lebanon will be a means to
undermine the government of Syria, and they’re determined to undermine any
government in Lebanon that they see as hostile,” Mr. Alterman said, adding, “I
don’t think economic measures can deter people from what they regard as their
strategic goals.”
New York Times