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Benjamin Weinthal

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Benjamin Weinthal,

Benjamin Weinthal

Opinion

How UK should foil Hizbollah and Syria

August 11, 2011 11:19
1 min read

The UK is uniquely positioned to lead the EU in severely clamping down on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's blood-soaked campaign against pro-democracy activists.

The pressing question is how, short of military strikes, the UK and Europe can dislodge the regime and end his alliance with Iran's rulers and Hizbollah, while showing solidarity with the Syrian democracy movement.

Sadly, the passivity of the UN echoes the general failure to stop Assad's killing spree. Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, warned Assad that the "world is watching". While Pillay is just watching, her boss, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, articulated a "growing concern" over the "deteriorating" conditions in Syria. Awareness through action has hardly been a UN priority.

But there are forms of action available. Syria's main economic vulnerability is its energy resources. A broad-based, concerted EU effort to slash the consumption of Syrian oil, along with painful sanctions dramatically curtailing the activities of European energy companies in Syria, would deliver a one-two punch to the regime's economic nerve centre.