The US Treasury has sanctioned 271 employees at the Syrian Scientific Studies and Research Center (SSRC) in response to the sarin gas attack launched by the Syrian regime earlier this month that killed nearly 100 civilians. The move represents one of the largest sanctions actions ever taken by the Treasury.
The SSRC is Syria’s government agency believe to be responsible for
developing and producing non-conventional weapons, as well as the means
to deliver them. The centre’s 271 sanctioned employees have expertise in
chemistry and related disciplines, or have worked in support of the
SSRC’s chemical weapons programme since 2012 or earlier.
They were found
to have assisted, sponsored or provided financial, material or
technological support, to the Syrian government.
The Treasury’s action means that the named individuals will be
blocked from holding any property or interests in property within the
US. In addition, US citizens are largely prohibited from dealings with
these people.
John Gilbert, a senior science fellow at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation in
Washington DC, says the SSRC’s connection to Syria’s chemical weapons
programme has been well-known and widely reported for many years.
However, Gilbert notes that sanctions of this nature have not been in
place, and the implied threats of sanctions appear to have been
ineffectual. ‘It obviously did not deter them from maintaining what
knowledge or material they have had since 2013,’ he tells Chemistry World.
More might needed
‘By themselves, these sanctions might not be effective,’ Gilbert
says, noting that they deal mostly with the financial transactions of
the named individuals. He suggests that the Syrian government or its
allies could decide to cover the financial loses of the named
individuals, thereby rendering the new sanctions meaningless.
‘I don’t think that the sanctions themselves would encourage any of
these people to resign from the institute, even if they were allowed
to,’ adds Gilbert, who previously headed the US Department of Defense’s
chemical and biological inspection division. ‘They may have personal and
professional commitments to the regime,’ he adds, suggesting that wide
international support for the Syrian sanctions would be more likely to
change behaviours.
Other experts agree that these sanctions by the US are largely symbolic. ‘I don’t think it has much actual effect,’ says Dan Kaszeta,
a UK security consultant who formerly served as a US Army Chemical
Corps officer. ‘Other than to, perhaps, demonstrate to the Assad
government that we know who works in its secretive research institute.’
Meanwhile, Gilbert remains puzzled by why the Assad regime chose to
use sarin in this particular rebel-held town in the Idlib province,
which neither appeared to be a hotbed of resistance nor threaten
critical government resources. ‘Sarin evaporates very quickly, so if you
aren’t immediately contaminated then the risk is absolutely minimal,’
he notes. ‘If it was used to support a ground defence to that area that
might make sense, but there was no ground offensive by the regime.’
This article is reproduced with permission from Chemistry World. The article was first published on April 26, 2017.
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