Lebanese former Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil was blacklisted by the U.S.
By Ian Talley in Washington and Nazih Osseiran in Beirut wsj.com — — The Trump administration on Tuesday blacklisted two former Lebanese government ministers it says have aided Iran-backed Hezbollah and are part of systemic corruption that the U.S. says is contributing to the country’s economic and political crises. The Trump administration said the action against Yusuf Finyanus, a former minister of transportation and public works, and Ali Hassan Khalil, a former finance minister, is an effort to help Lebanon use the political backlash from last month’s deadly blast in Beirut to overhaul a government long plagued by corruption. The Treasury Department didn’t blame the two for being directly responsible for the port explosion that killed 191 people, injured thousands and leveled much of downtown Beirut last month, but cited the catastrophe as justifying urgent action. A senior administration official said the men likely had some level of oversight of the port during their tenures, though adding that the sanctions weren’t based on that fact. “Both of these ministers would have had some involvement in the development of Lebanese government policies and government action concerning the Beirut port and the activities there,” the official said. Neither of the former officials responded to requests for comment. Hezbollah officials didn’t respond to a request for comment.
U.S. officials last month said they planned sanctions and other diplomatic tools to help shape a new government that would pursue anticorruption measures and sideline Hezbollah, a political group and militia that is allied with U.S.-foe Iran. Washington and other Western nations have designated it as a terrorist group. Senior administration officials said the sanctions should serve as a warning to other Lebanese officials accused of corruption and tied to Hezbollah. David Schenker, the assistant secretary of state for near eastern affairs, said further sanctions should be expected. “I hope that we can get a bunch more of these out there as soon as possible,” he said, declining to elaborate on potential candidates.











