The United States is urging Lebanese banks to take "extra" caution in handling financial transactions with Syria, to prevent the Assad regime and its supporters from stashing money abroad, a senior Treasury official said Thursday.
"We want to be as careful as possible that the regime, its cronies, its allies that may be trying to shield their assets might not be able to do so," said David Cohen, the Treasury's under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence.
"We're working particularly with the Lebanese financial sector, which is very integrated with the Syrian financial sector," Cohen said, speaking at a forum at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.
Cohen noted that there had been "some capital flight out of Syria" after a peaceful uprising in March 2011 degenerated into an armed conflict that has cost thousands of lives.
Not all of Syria's capital exodus was unwelcome, if it came from opponents of Syrian President Bashar Assad, he said.
"We want to facilitate the capital flight of individuals in Syria who are not supporting the regime, and who want to leave Syria, who want to take their money with them.
"There's no reason that we would want to interfere with that."
In May 2011, as the conflict escalated into a bloody crackdown by Assad, the United States slapped sanction on his regime and its supporters.
President Barack Obama's administration has steadily widened the Syria sanctions and called for tough United Nations sanctions to force Assad's regime to comply with a U.N. peace plan.
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