U.S. aid to Lebanon suspended?

|

According to the United States Committee for a Free Lebanon, it is.

U.S.-Lebanese relations have plunged to new lows with the reported suspension of financial aid to Beirut in retaliation for its defiance of Washington's policies toward Hizbullah and advice on issues related to South Lebanon. In a front-page article, As Safir [Lebanese Arab nationalist newspaper] reported that the State Department decided to suspend $35 million allotted to Lebanon for 2002 in a recent decision that remained unpublicized. Although the US fiscal year began Oct. 1, 2001, Lebanon still has not received any of its economic and educational allocation, endorsed by Congress. Congress last week suspended $3 million earmarked for Lebanon's accession to the World Trade Organization, citing dissatisfaction with Beirut's economic policies. Soon thereafter, the State Department decided to indefinitely suspend the entire package, As Safir said. It listed as the main reasons for the action as:

-- Beirut's failure to rein in Hizbullah
-- Refusal to deploy the regular army in the south following Israel's withdrawal
-- Lebanon's unilateral decision to tap the Wazzani River
-- Threats to prosecute exiled opposition leader, Gen. Michel Aoun, for meetings with congress behind the Syria Accountability Act.

While Washington has upheld Lebanon's right to exploit water running through its territories, it has been irked by Beirut's failure to notify in advance the United States, the United Nations and the Hasbani River's littoral states of its plans.

And on the same page (scroll down), there's more on the story that Meryl posted yesterday about the riots in Damascus. Government efforts to keep this quiet seem to be failing.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Lynn B. published on September 30, 2002 1:41 PM.

Poster boy was the previous entry in this blog.

A disgrace is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Monthly Archives

Pages

Powered by Movable Type 4.31-en