I've been pooh poohing the European ban on Hezbullah because it relates only to the 'military wing' and not to the 'political wing' - a distinction that's totally artificial. But counter-terrorism expert Matthew Levitt writes that
Europe's ban on Hezbullah will have an impact.
Despite the formal focus on asset freezing, the most significant impact
of the EU ban will be felt on other fronts. First, it will enable EU
governments to initiate preemptive intelligence investigations into
activities that can be tied in any way to Hezbollah's military wing.
Germany and a handful of other European countries have already conducted
such investigations, but the designation will spur many others to do
so. This alone is a tremendous change that should make Europe a far less
attractive place for Hezbollah operatives.
Second, the ban is a strong means of communicating to Hezbollah that
its current activities are beyond the pale, and that continuing them
will exact a high cost. Previously, the group had been permitted to mix
its political and social welfare activities with its terrorist and
criminal activities, giving it an effective way to raise and launder
money along with a measure of immunity for its militant activities.
Today's designation makes clear to Hezbollah that international
terrorism, organized crime, and militia operations will endanger its
legitimacy as a political and social actor.
As for the financial angle, seizing significant amounts of Hezbollah
funds is unlikely because the group's accounts are presumably registered
under its nonmilitary names. But the ban will probably still curtail
Hezbollah fundraising. Some of the group's members may be barred from
traveling to Europe as governments become bolder in opening new
investigations, and Hezbollah leaders may curtail certain activities on
the continent as they assess the ban's full impact.
Hopefully....
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