U.S. Senators Call for Sanctions to Pressure Lebanon to Form Gov’t
BEIRUT (Dispatches) – In yet another case of blatant U.S. interference in Lebanon’s domestic affairs, top Republican and Democratic senators have called on the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden to use sanctions to pressure Lebanese lawmakers to form a new government in the crisis-plagued Mediterranean country.
“Instead of simply waiting for political movement and reforms, it is time for the administration to implement a more forward leaning policy,” Republican Senator James Risch and Democratic Senator Robert Menendez said in a letter sent to U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Friday.
“We urge the Biden administration to use all available leverage, including the threat of sanctions, to ensure that Lebanese lawmakers select a new president and form a government in a timely manner and implement overdue economic reforms,” said the letter, viewed by Middle East Eye.
Accusing the Lebanese lawmakers of “corruption,” Risch and Menendez added, “We strongly urge the administration to use its existing authorities to sanction members of Lebanon’s financial and political elite across the political and sectarian spectrum who are engaging in corruption and undermining the rule of law.”
The Lebanese parliament, which is divided between camps for and against the Hezbollah resistance movement, failed for the 10th time on Thursday to select a replacement for former President Michel Aoun, whose term expired in October.
Thursday’s vote was attended by 109 lawmakers in the 128-member parliament. Candidate Michel Moawad, who is seen as close to the United States and backed by the Lebanese Forces Party, received 38 votes, well short of the figure needed to win the first round. A candidate needs two-thirds of the vote, or 86 lawmakers, to make it through the first stage. An absolute majority is needed in subsequent rounds. A total of 37 lawmakers cast blank ballots, while the other votes went to other candidates.
Speaker Nabih Berri ended the session without setting a date for another voting session, which was usually held on a weekly basis over the past nine voting sessions.
Sheikh Mohammad Yazbek, head of the religious council of Hezbollah resistance movement, said last week that the United States is seeking to impose a president on Lebanon who will serve the best interests of Washington and the Zionist regime amid a political stalemate in the crisis-ridden Arab country.
Sheikh Yezbek added that the Lebanese are themselves capable of electing a president and building their country, noting that one should only trust those who are preoccupied with the homeland and its sovereignty.