U.S. Slaps Sanctions on Assad Uncle, Top Syrian General

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Washington on Thursday placed economic sanctions on a senior Syrian general and a financier uncle of President Bashar al-Assad, adding new pressure on the regime over its bloody political crackdown.

The Treasury Department added Mohammed Makhlouf, Assad's maternal uncle and the father of already-sanctioned telecoms magnate Rami Makhlouf, and 4th armored division General Aus Aslan, to its growing list of Syrian figures and organizations that Americans are banned from doing business with.

The Treasury called Makhlouf, 79, someone "whom Assad used to make and move money" and an important Assad economic advisor.

"Makhlouf ensured that assets in nearly all sectors were controlled by businessmen who were willing to act as proxies for the Assad regime in return for profits," it said.

"In addition, he served as President Assad's primary economic advisor and final decision maker on capital allocation decisions for Syrian regime investments in private banks in Syria."

Also listed in the new sanctions were a defense ministry business -- the Military Housing Establishment, and the government-controlled Real Estate Bank, the country's second largest bank.

The Military Housing Establishment "provides funding to the regime", the Treasury said, while the bank is "responsible for administering the Government of Syria’s borrowings."

The move came as both the European Union and Arab League nations also stepped up sanctions pressure on the Assad regime for its heavy-handed eight-month crackdown on political protesters which has left more than 3,500 dead.

"It has never been more critical to escalate pressure on the Syrian government to immediately cease all violence against its own people and isolate the regime from the international financial system," said Treasury under secretary David Cohen in a statement.

Comments 1
Default-user-icon trueself (Guest) 01 December 2011, 23:31

All thye santions will not yield the desired objectives if no military intervention on the ground is initiated ASAP. The Syrian regime through its many allies will be able to suffle money in order to remain intact and immune from total collapse. The regime knows well that the only way for it to remain in exitence, not power, is to fight to the last Syrian. They have no exit other than Syria. The western world should be more flexible in terms of providing the Syrian regime individuals a window of opportunity for absconding from Syria to a safe place where they could be immune from prosecution. Should be be provided, I surmise the regime soon or later would find itself in the corner and would jump at the opportunity of fleeing the country to a place arranged by the Arabs and the USA. It would be unfair for something like this to happen as the regime has killed thousands and needs to be held accountable. But doing so would also stop the killing and provide instant domecracy.