US Seeks to Hammer Hizbollah by Stopping Aid to Lebanon

Published May 20th, 2020 - 07:41 GMT
A man clad in mask due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic walks past a graffiti reading "VIRUS" on the facade of a fortified local branch of the Bank of Beirut in the Lebanese capital on May 18, 2020. Lebanon is ready to terminate a 23-year-old dollar peg and float the pound, but only after it secures billions in aid, Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni had said on May 15. After talks started with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on a plan to rescue Lebanon's crisis hit economy, he also said banking sector
A man clad in mask due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic walks past a graffiti reading "VIRUS" on the facade of a fortified local branch of the Bank of Beirut in the Lebanese capital on May 18, 2020. Lebanon is ready to terminate a 23-year-old dollar peg and float the pound, but only after it secures billions in aid, Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni had said on May 15. After talks started with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on a plan to rescue Lebanon's crisis hit economy, he also said banking sector restructuring would entail halving the number of lenders. PATRICK BAZ / AFP
Highlights
They revealed that US non-military assistance to Lebanon remains shy and is directed at the medical and educational sectors.

The US Congress prepares to discuss a bill aimed at prohibiting US assistance to the Lebanese government if Hezbollah continues to control or influence decision-making in Lebanon.

“It is not easy to approve this bill because Congress members are not united and because it requires several signatures before becoming a bill,” sources at the Lebanese Embassy in Washington told Asharq Al-Awsat on Tuesday.

In order to become a bill, it should first be approved by the Committee on Foreign Relations and later pass the Senate and House before making its way to President Donald Trump's office for his signature.

“Normally, the US administration rejects bills that could produce divisions among the Lebanese, but that does not mean it supports Hezbollah’s arms,” the embassy sources said.

They revealed that US non-military assistance to Lebanon remains shy and is directed at the medical and educational sectors.

“If such a bill is approved, which is highly unlikely, it would not be the first of its kind,” the sources said.

They added that similar bills were approved by the US administration, including the listing of Hezbollah as a terrorist organization and the prohibition of its members to open bank accounts in dollars.

This article has been adapted from its original source.

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