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Viewing cable 10BRUSSELS219, U.S. - EU SANCTIONS INFORMAL

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10BRUSSELS219 2010-02-25 08:42 2011-08-30 01:44 CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN USEU Brussels
VZCZCXRO9777
PP RUEHAG RUEHROV RUEHSL RUEHSR
DE RUEHBS #0219/01 0560842
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 250842Z FEB 10 ZDK
FM USEU BRUSSELS
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY
INFO RUCNMEU/EU INTEREST COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHGG/UN SECURITY COUNCIL COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEAORC/US CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/DOD WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEFHLC/DEPT OF HOMELAND SECURITY WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 06 BRUSSELS 000219 
 
NOFORN 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR IO, EEB, S/CT, S/P, EUR, L, AF, EAP 
TREASURY FOR TFI 
JUSTICE FOR CIVIL DIVISION 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/24/2020 
TAGS: BEXP BM EAIR EFIN ETTC EUN EWWT KJUS KN KNNP
KTFN, PINR, PTER, SO, UNSC, ZI, ER 
SUBJECT: U.S. - EU SANCTIONS INFORMAL 
 
REF: A. 2009 BRUSSELS 1524 
     B. 2010 BRUSSELS 35 
     C. 2009 BRUSSELS 101 
     D. 2010 BRUSSELS 197 
     E. 2009 BRUSSELS 616 
     F. 2009 BRUSSELS 493 
 
BRUSSELS 00000219  001.2 OF 006 
 
 
Classified By: USEU EconMinCouns Peter Chase for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d 
). 
 
1.  (C//NF) SUMMARY.  On February 3, an interagency 
delegation held an off-the-record roundtable discussion on 
sanctions issues with Spain (current EU Presidency) and the 
EU institutions.  Topics included legal challenges to 
sanctions regimes, innovations to UN and EU counterterrorism 
programs, data privacy, North Korea, Zimbabwe, Burma, 
Eritrea, and Somalia.  EU representatives welcomed changes to 
the UN 1267 (Al-Qaeda and Taliban) sanctions program made by 
UNSCR 1904, noting the updated EU Regulation implementing 
those measures.  But they indicated some uncertainty 
concerning future EU implementation of UN 1267 sanctions, 
given the ongoing designation challenges before EU courts and 
an anticipated lawsuit by which the European Parliament would 
assert co-equal authority over legislative design and program 
implementation.  With respect to EU sanctions programs 
pending annual renewal, EU representatives previewed the 
rollover of EU sanctions against Zimbabwe, which they 
expected to include the de-listing of certain individuals and 
entities.  They also said that EU sanctions against Burma 
would be renewed in April, but that it was too soon to 
determine whether any modifications to that program would be 
made.  EU targeted sanctions are approaching a sliding scale 
for due process standards and noFebru 
renewed. 
Q other EU Member States, Torres-Dulce informed the 
delegation that the Spanish Presidency would remain in 
listening mode on specific sanctions policies.  He then 
offered some general commentary, describing the impact of the 
Lisbon Treaty in the sanctions domain.  From April onward, 
the EU will begin establishing various components of its 
nascent diplomatic corps, the External Action Service 
("EAS").  The EAS should create synergies for certain 
sectors, including sanctions.  His personal view is that 
Lisbon represents a push toward common European structures 
and that the EAS will probably increase "structural 
stability" on many External Relations fronts.  Spain is 
sensitive to the precedents that it is overseeing during its 
Presidency tenure and is moving cautiously on all post-Lisbon 
matters for which there is no EU case law. 
 
 
BRUSSELS 00000219  002.2 OF 006 
 
 
--------------------------------------------- --- 
LEGAL CHALLENGES TO UN AND EU TARGETED SANCTIONS 
--------------------------------------------- --- 
 
4.  (SBU) EU staffers explained that the European Court of 
Justice ("ECJ") would have new sanctions-related authorities 
under the Lisbon Treaty.  Although there is no established 
case law for these areas, staffers highlighted that the Court 
would have jurisdiction on all issues concerning the rights 
of the individual.  All targeted sanctions will therefore be 
considered under the purview of the Court under the EU's 
revised treaty structure. 
 
5.  (C//NF) EU staffers said that UNSCR 1904 was "very 
welcome" in the EU, but argued that more could potentially be 
done to strengthen procedural safeguards in the UNSCR 1267 
program.  EU courts may demand that due process standards for 
autonomous EU counterterrorism (i.e., UNSCR 1373) 
designations apply to UNSCR 1267 or other sanctions programs 
implemented in the European Union.  Commission and Council 
lawyers are currently asserting the opposite to the courts 
(namely that internal EU/UNSCR 1373 standards should not 
apply in all cases).  But, absent formal jurisprudence, they 
are only guardedly optimistic about the strength of their 
arguments.  Based on formal legal opinions and informal 
feedback, staffers understand the courts to be saying, "what 
does it cost you to enhance the rights of the individual," 
Commission and Council staffers warned. 
 
6.  (C//NF) EU sanctions are approaching a sliding scale for 
due process standards and norms.  Council and Commission 
lawyers are particularly concerned that the ECJ will find 
"manifest error" in (and seek to review information 
underlying) listing decisions made by the UN Security 
Council.  EU lawyers are telling the EU courts to "back off" 
of UN Security Council prerogatives and argue that the 
intensity of EQcourt review should vary across the diverse 
spectrum of sanctions programs. 
 
7.  (C//NF) According to Council Secretariat lawyer Richard 
Szostak, "one area of high risk" involves cases under active 
review in European courts for which tQ EU institutions have 
little or no information supporting UN sanctions 
designations.  Szostak cited the Al Faqih case, which will 
close for filings on February 25.  He says that the UN has 
not provided a statement of case and that the EU currently 
has no other information with which to defend itself. 
According to Szostak, the EU finds itself in similar 
situations with respect to multiple cases concerning UN 
designations (i.e., UN reference numbers: QI.A.181.04, 
QE.M.120.05, QI.A.198.05, QI.K.214.06, QE.L.11.01, and 
QE.L.118.05), all of which are being defended by good 
lawyers.  For Council and Commission lawyers, it is crucial 
that UN statements of case include facts and not look like 
hearsay.  This is particularly true because the EU does not 
re-process or add information to documents that it receives 
from the UN (REF A/Para 9). 
 
8.  (C//NF) EU staffers explained the EU's internal "review" 
of UNSCR 1267 terrorism designations, as recently codified in 
the implementing Council Regulation (EU) No 1286/2009 (REFS 
A/Para 8, B/Paras 2-5).  One Commission staffer asserted that 
an EU-level review of Security Council designations is not 
inconsistent with the UN Charter.  He said that UN Member 
States should be regularly updating information concerning 
sanctions targets, noting that UNSCR 1822 had introduced 
concepts and tools that the EU was simply putting into 
practice.  "UNSCR 1904 might not be enough, but all of the 
tools are there," he stated.  He and other EU staffers agreed 
that the combination of procedural innovations from UNSCR 
1822 and UNSCR 1904 "should be enough" to prevent EU courts 
from blocking implementation of targeted UN sanctions within 
the European Union.  (COMMENT: A final judgment in the "Kadi 
II" case, currently before the lower court, should help 
determine if such cautious optimism is warranted.  END 
COMMENT.) 
 
BRUSSELS 00000219  003 OF 006 
 
 
 
9.  (C//NF) The possibility of administrative review applies 
retroactively for anyone subject to EU counterterrorism 
sanctions who requests it.  Individuals and entities still 
have only two months to challenge their initial listing 
before the EU courts, but can submit "observations" and 
request an administrative review of their designations at any 
time.  Internal EU review will incorporate those 
observations, along with any information supplied by the UN 
or EU Member States.  The review will end when the EU 
notifies the applicant of the reasons for its continued 
designation.  Staffers distinguished this "notification of 
decision" from a point-by-point reply to observations offered 
by the applicant.  They also said that the results of EU 
reviews would be presented to the UN for information purposes 
only. 
 
10.  (C//NF) Despite the lack of clarity concerning other 
sanctions programs, EU staffers are confident that their 
autonomous terrorism sanctions (UNSCR 1373) regime remains on 
solid legal footing.  They cited the case of 
Mujahideen-e-Khalq (MEK, known within the EU as "OMPI," the 
French acronym for the People's Mujahedin of Iran), which 
successfully challenged its designation as a terrorist 
organization in the European Union (See also REF C).  In its 
proceedings, the lower court of the ECJ annulled OMPI's 
designation, but affirmed that internal EU due process 
mechanisms were sound.  Staffers noted that the EU had 
drafted its own statement of case against OMPI and was thus 
not completely reliant upon UN-derived information.  (NOTE: 
France is appealing before the high court the lower court's 
decision annulling the OMPI designation.  END NOTE.) 
 
------------------------------------ 
DATA PRIVACY OVERSIGHT AND SANCTIONS 
------------------------------------ 
 
11.  (C//NF) The European Data Protection Supervisor ("EDPS") 
has issued a legal opinion concerning the EU's latest UN 
terrorism sanctions (UNSCR 1267) implementing Regulation.  In 
his non-binding opinion, the EDPS asserts the authority to 
access all personal data, including classified information, 
processed by the EU institutions.  With respect to targeted 
sanctions, the EDPS states that a security clearance and 
proper handling procedures for sensitive information may be 
required so that he and the European Court of Justice may 
"review whether a fair balance is struck between the need to 
combat international terrorism and the protection of 
fundamental rights."  EU staffers acknowledged that EDPS 
oversight authority was not restricted by law but stressed 
that the EU Council was not obliged to recognize his legal 
opinions.  (COMMENT: The European Parliament, which plans to 
sue the Council and Commission to obtain a greater role in 
targeted sanctions implementation, will likely seize upon the 
EDPS legal opinion in its quest for stronger data privacy 
protection standards.  END COMMENT.) 
 
----------- 
NORTH KOREA 
----------- 
 
12.  (C//NF) On DPRK sanctions, EU staffers said that efforts 
were underway to facilitate EU implementation of measures for 
which Member States retain competence, including:  a 
correspondence table for various customs authorities; a new 
approach to dual-use items (we assume this to mean dual-use 
Regulation 428/2009); a clause requiring Member States to 
inform the Commission of steps taken to implement DPRK 
sanctions; and certain non-binding UN provisions that the EU 
has rendered binding within its own territory  (e.g., 
restrictions on shipping, specialized training, and financial 
services). 
 
13.  (C//NF) Given the possibility of court challenges to 
DPRK sanctions measures, EU staffers expressed concern over 
the lack of narrative summaries emanating from the UN. 
 
BRUSSELS 00000219  004.2 OF 006 
 
 
Statements of case against DPRK targets need not be very 
specific, they suggested, since these are being designated 
largely for their links to a state and jurisdiction.  But "a 
reason would be helpful" vis--vis EU courts, one Council 
lawyer explained, even if these do not require due process as 
practiced in the counterterrorism context. 
 
14.  (C//NF) Commission sanctions staffer Stephane Chardon 
indicated that provisions for enhanced vigilance in the 
financial sector were drawn from the EU's latest anti-money 
laundering ("AML/CFT") Directive.  Although DPRK sanctions 
and proliferation finance issues differ somewhat from the 
vulnerabilities addressed by AML/CFT Directives, the 
Commission is attempting to "transpose" other areas of its 
technical expertise into sanctions mechanisms.  According to 
Chardon, some individual Member States have given further 
guidance to their financial institutions with respect to DPRK 
sanctions implementation.  (COMMENT: The EU continues to 
resist issuing an EU-wide advisory, however.  END COMMENT.) 
 
-------- 
ZIMBABWE 
-------- 
 
15.  (C//NF) Spain indicated that a new EU Council Decision 
(FKA Common Position) on Zimbabwe would be finalized over the 
following days and described forthcoming changes to the EU's 
sanctions program.  (NOTE: The Common Position underlying 
that program was due to expire February 20, prompting the EU 
to review/renew existing measures.  See REF D for information 
about the eventual rollover.  END NOTE.)  After intense 
debate and compromise, Perm Rep officials from the EU 
Council's Africa Working Group (COAFR) have agreed to remove 
six (6) individuals and nine (9) entities from the EU's 
designation list.  The individuals include one person who has 
left the GoZ, four who are now deceased, and one, Thamer Al 
Shanfari, whom the EU has assessed no longer meets 
designation criteria.  Eight of the entities are Zimbabwean 
parastatals that were designated by the EU on January 27, 
2009, but which have been judged, based on reporting from EU 
Member State missions in Harare, to be under control of the 
Zimbabwean finance ministry and thus de-linked from ZANU-PF. 
Apart from these de-listings, all EU measures would be 
renewed for twelve months, despite a strong preference for a 
six-month rollover among some Member States. 
 
16.  (C//NF) The U.S. delegation informed EU counterparts 
that parastatal designations were assessed by the USG to be a 
significant leverage point vis-a-vis Robert Mugabe and 
ZANU-PF, and cautioned that the de-listing of these entities 
would most likely diminish EU leverage with respect to the 
Zimbabwean regime. 
 
17.  (C//NF) U.S. officials also emphasized the need for 
transatlantic political unity on Zimbabwe, in particular 
since that country is not subject to UN sanctions.  EU 
staffers and the Spanish Presidency then previewed the draft 
public "conclusions" that would accompany the new Council 
Decision.  These would state firstly that sanctions were 
still appropriate and were being renewed due to insufficient 
political progress in Zimbabwe.  Staffers were adamant that 
select de-liQings did not refute this statement and that 
signs of dynamism in the EU program would encourage and 
empower the MDC.  They nonetheless agreed to avoid public 
statements that could undermine USG political messaging.  The 
de-listings would thus be treated as a group and in generic 
terms in secondary "conclusions." 
 
----- 
BURMA 
----- 
 
18.  (C//NF) EU sanctions against Burma are due to expire on 
April 30.  Spain had not yet begun work on a renewal Council 
Decision, nor had it received draft text from EU Member 
States or institutions.  None of our interlocutors had a 
 
BRUSSELS 00000219  005.2 OF 006 
 
 
clear sense of the political direction among Member States, 
but all agreed that major changes to the EU program were 
unlikely in the immediate future.  EU sanctions against Burma 
are comparatively complex, and new measures were instituted 
as recently as August 2009.  Spain expects to initiate the 
rollover process with a relatively standard 2-month lead time 
in case of unforeseen complications during internal 
negotiations.  An anticipated EU official visit to Burma may 
not happen before the end of April and should not conflict 
with EU sanctions, by which Member States have suspended all 
high-level bilateral engagement with the GoB.  The EU visit 
will most likely take place at the Director level. 
 
19.  (C//NF) EU staffers were dismissive when pressed about 
their and Member States' implementation of existing 
prohibitions on certain Burmese exports.  "If Thailand won't 
act, it's hard to do anything," one staffer lamented. 
Another acknowledged that Burma engaged in only a small 
percentage of its total trade with the U.S. and EU; Western 
import restrictions could therefore be only minimally 
effective at best. 
 
--------------------------------------------- ----- 
ERITREA, SOMALIA, AND MORE ON DUE PROCESS VARIANCE 
--------------------------------------------- ----- 
 
20.  (C//NF) Council Secretariat sanctions staffer Francesco 
Fini called the due process elements of UNSCR 1907, 
concerning Eritrea, "weak" when compared to other sanctions 
programs.  He then asked if this was because the UN was 
targeting a political regime.  Fini sees a pattern whereby 
different standards/norms of due process appear, depending on 
the focus of a sanctions program.  In his view, programs 
focused on non-state actors and individuals unaffiliated with 
political regimes, such as DRC sanctions, tend to provide 
robust due process elements.  Conversely, programs targeting 
state actors and individual political elites offer few 
procedural safeguards.  While these trends may seem 
coincidental, they are important for EU institutions, which 
are increasingly wary of court challenges.  "We will want to 
know, what is the scope of due process to apply" in the 
context of Eritrea sanctions, Fini informed the delegation. 
 
21.  (C//NF) EU staffers were keen to know when designations 
would be finalized in the UN/Somalia sanctions committee. 
The EU has not yet passed a Regulation to implement its 
Somalia sanctions Common Position (2009/138/CFSP of 16 
February 2009) and is therefore unprepared for a roll-out of 
UN measures.  Staffers expect the Regulation, a strict 
implementation of UNSCR 1844, to be ready by the end of 
February. 
 
22.  (C//NF) Fini again raised the due process issue with 
respect to targeted Somalia sanctions.  He noted that the 
procedural safeguards found in UNSCR 1844 came more or less 
directly from UNSCR 1822 concerning Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. 
 Fini asked iQ3QEce'Ksthe EDPS states that a security clearance and 
proper handling procedures for sensitive information may be 
required so that he and the European Court of Justice may 
"review whether a fair balance is struck between the need to 
combat international terrorism and the protection of 
fundamental rights."  EU staffers acknowledged that EDPS 
oversight authority was not restricted by law but stressed 
that the EU Council was not obliged to recognize his legal 
opinions.  (COMMENT: The European Parliament, which plans to 
sue the Council and Commission to obtain a greater role in 
targeted sanctions implementation, will likely seize upon the 
EDPS legal opinion in its quest for stronger data privacy 
protection standards.  END COMMENT.) 
 
----------- 
NORTH KOREA 
----------- 
 
12.  (C//NF) On DPRK sanctions, EU staffers said that efforts 
were underway to facilitate EU implementation of measures for 
which Member States retain competence, including:  a 
correspondence table for various customs authorities; a new 
approach to dual-use items (we assume this to mean dual-use 
Regulation 428/2009); a clause requiring Member States to 
inform the Commission of steps taken to implement DPRK 
sanctions; and certain non-binding UN provisions that the EU 
has rendered binding within its own territory  (e.g., 
restrictions on shipping, specialized training, and financial 
services). 
 
13.  (C//NF) Given the possibility of court challenges to 
DPRK sanctions measures, EU staffers expressed concern over 
the lack of narrative summaries emanating from the UN. 
 
BRUSSELS 00000219  006 OF 006 
 
 
.