Time for Washington To Stop Sanctioning the World: US Arrogance Leaves Trail of Innocent Victims Behind
by Doug
Bandow Posted on October 11, 2021
The "Lift Sanctions, Save Lives" network is
lobbying Congress to do what it should have done years ago: assess the impact
of economic sanctions now routinely applied to allies as well as adversaries. Such
a review is long overdue.
Economic sanctions have become a new global
battlefield. In July Beijing targeted several
organizations and individuals, including former Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross,
in retaliation for earlier U.S. penalties. In January Beijing sanctioned 28
former Trump administration officials, including Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo, as the Biden administration took over. In March, after the European
Union penalized Beijing for suppressing political liberty in Hong Kong, the
Xi regime retaliated against a
number of Europeans, including members of the European Parliament.
The Chinese actions had a little practical impact –
preventing Pompeo and Ross from traveling to Hong Kong is not much of an
inconvenience. (Ironically, they deserve to be sanctioned by Americans for
their awful performance in the office!) Moreover, Beijing’s action, though popular
at home, backfired internationally. For instance, the European Parliament
effectively killed a pending investment agreement.
Nevertheless, the whining about China’s action is
striking. Americans and Europeans declared economic war on the proud,
nationalistic People’s Republic of China, and were surprised when it struck
back. Who knew that the PRC would dare act like … America!?
Of course, Beijing remains but a babe when it comes to
applying sanctions. The US is by far the world’s cruelest and most prolific
practitioner of economic warfare, which these days mostly means starving
desperate civilians under impoverished dictatorships. Congress appears to be
constantly looking for foreign peoples to target, based on the bizarre
assumption that if the US punishes civilians already ravaged by civil war,
political oppression, and socialist economics, the reigning autocrats will
immediately apologize, disarm, liberalize, democratize, and ally with America.
Unfortunately, despite widespread expectations to the
contrary, this theoretical political unicorn has yet to make an appearance.
Washington currently is applying economic and/or financial sanctions on Cuba,
Venezuela, Russia, Syria, Iran, and North Korea. The US also has imposed more
limited penalties on states ranging from China to even Germany. Although
Washington has further immiserated the victims of some of the world’s worst
governments, none of the oppressors has yielded. None.
Heckuva job, Uncle Sam!
Nevertheless, Washington keeps trying. While exempting
murderous allies like Saudi Arabia from a penalty, hardly a day goes by without
the US sanctioning another country, company, or individual. Attempts to
lighten, let alone eliminate, existing sanctions are shouted down by lobbies
convinced that just a little more effort, a tiny tightening of the rules, will
finally bring surrender or collapse, followed by the flourishing of a new democratic
Garden of Eden whose residents will be properly grateful to America for its
benighted intervention.
What makes US sanctions uniquely punitive is an
international financial system disproportionately dependent on America. In 1986
Congress frustrated that a quarter-century of sanctions had failed to cow the
Castro brothers, targeted European firms investing in Cuba. America later
pioneered in Sudan's use of financial sanctions, which were applied to anyone
with the slightest connection to the US banking system.
Washington is deadly serious about sanctions. They are
sometimes presented as a moderate, peaceful alternative to war, yet their
consequences can be as lethal as war. This is why US officials have turned to
sanctions as the new normal. Their very harshness makes them attractive to
policymakers.
This was illustrated by the infamous exchange between
Leslie Stahl of 60 Minutes and America’s United Nations Ambassador Madeleine
Albright. When asked to justify the death of a half-million Iraqi children due to
sanctions, Albright’s response was
chilling: "We think the price is worth it." She later acknowledged
that her words were impolitic in the extreme – she won few friends in the
Mideast by admitting that Washington knowingly killed hundreds of thousands of
Muslim kids to advance US policy – but she never repudiated the notion that she
and other US policymakers were entitled to casually sacrifice the lives of
others for American geopolitical objectives.
This attitude lives on with the architects of today’s
starvation sanctions most brutally applied to Syria and Venezuela. For
instance, James Jeffrey was a "never-Trumper" diplomat appointed by
the Trump administration to deal with Syria, with predictably disastrous
results. He actively undercut administration policy while channeling
Albright-style cruelty. He admitted lying about the
number of US troops in Syria to thwart the president’s expressed
desire to withdraw. Worse, he supported sanctions on the Syrian people, victims
of years of civil war, in order to use their misery – impoverishing them and
preventing reconstruction – to pressure the government. The Syrian people were
but a convenient way to create his desired
"quagmire" for Russia. He indicated no
concern for the Syrians who were suffering. After all, "the price is worth
it," in the view of Washington’s masters of the universe!
Needless to say, Jeffrey’s vicious policy failed as
badly as did Albright’s. But neither were inconvenienced by their own failure
or the hardship they caused others. The Washington "Blob" takes care
of its own. Albright, a living symbol of sanctimonious arrogance at its worst,
has become an elder stateswoman, routinely trotted out to add vacuous gravitas
to various meaningless events and panels. Jeffrey left Syria a horror show but
picked up the usual well-paid, high-status sinecure with one of the national
capital’s venerable think tanks – filled with similar staffers, almost always
pro-war, usually wrong, and never repentant, no matter how high the body county
they left behind.
Indeed, the Trump proclivity for "maximum
pressure" campaigns offered a significant test of the value of US economic
sanctions in forcing significant political change in other nations. The
experience of Russia, Venezuela, Syria, Iran, North Korea, and Cuba, all of
which faced substantially increased sanctions, was US zero, adversaries six.
Nor did adding in countries facing lesser sanctions, most notably China, help.
In those cases, Washington did enough to irritate target nations but not enough
to cause them serious injury.
It is time for Washington to consider the impact of US
sanctions – their failure to achieve their purported ends and terrible harm
caused the most vulnerable populations. Rep. Jesus "Chuy" Garcia
advanced an amendment mandating an assessment by the Government Accountability
Office that was adopted by the House to the National Defense Authorization Act.
The provision calls
for: "a report on all comprehensive sanctions imposed on de jure or
de facto governments of foreign countries, and all comprehensive and
targeted sanctions imposed on non-state actors, including individuals,
organizations, or other entities, that exercise significant de facto
governmental control over a foreign civilian population, under any provision of
law." The required study would cover humanitarian impact, national
security purpose, success rates, and enforcement prospects.
A coalition of peace, humanitarian, and related groups
is pushing to ensure that the provision survives in the conference committee.
The activists argue: "Impact assessments provide valuable information to
ensure that U.S. foreign policy advances US interests while protecting innocent
civilians and maintaining channels for humanitarian organizations to continue
their work. This issue is even more important as populations around the globe
continue to manage the shared threat of the COVID-19 pandemic."
In fact, the passage should be a no-brainer. Such
assessments should be conducted regularly on all sanctions imposed by the US
government. The only logical opposition would come from the Albrights and
Jeffreys, who lose when their cruel yet ineffective policies are publicized. A
policymaker might not mind if a half million children elsewhere are killed – in
Washington such an event is viewed as the inevitable collateral damage when the
great American republic, leader of the free world and all that, selflessly acts
to save humanity and Western civilization. However, few policymakers want to be
known publicly to hold that view. Hence Albright regrets admitting the
truth. It is well past time for a very public evaluation of Washington’s
sanctions policy.
Until recently US policymakers only restricted the
behavior of Americans. No one in Washington imagined that they were authorized
to regulate other peoples. However, that understanding changed as the capital
turned into an ostentatiously imperial city, dedicated to world domination.
Washington, D.C. now is filled with wannabe masters of the universe, determined
to rule over others wherever they live.
Unfortunately, the consequences of US sanctions policy
have been horrid.
After two decades of costly yet largely failed endless war, Washington
policymakers should learn the virtue of humility. America’s sanctions policy is
both costly and cruel, with the gains rarely worth the resulting human harm.
The Biden administration should review current policy and sharply limit the use
of economic sanctions.
Doug Bandow is a Senior Fellow at the Cato
Institute. A former Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan, he is the author
of Foreign Follies: America’s New Global Empire.
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