Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
02AMMAN2554
2002-05-21 07:58:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Amman
Cable title:  

UNRWA AND U.S. INTERESTS

Tags:  PREL PREF PGOV KPAL SY LE JO 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 AMMAN 002554 

SIPDIS

FOR DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE FROM AMBASSADOR GNEHM

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/20/2012
TAGS: PREL PREF PGOV KPAL SY LE JO
SUBJECT: UNRWA AND U.S. INTERESTS


Classified By: DCM Greg Berry, per 1.5 (b) and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 AMMAN 002554

SIPDIS

FOR DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE FROM AMBASSADOR GNEHM

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/20/2012
TAGS: PREL PREF PGOV KPAL SY LE JO
SUBJECT: UNRWA AND U.S. INTERESTS


Classified By: DCM Greg Berry, per 1.5 (b) and (d).


1. (U) This is a joint message from Embassies Amman, Beirut
and Damascus.


2. (C) Given current scrutiny in the Israeli press and in
Congress of UNRWA's programs and role in the West Bank, it is
important to remember that UNRWA plays a key role throughout
the region -- Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank and Gaza
-- in maintaining a basic standard of living (and hence
political stability) among an extremely politicized
Palestinian refugee population. It is the largest provider
of services to Palestinian refugees -- services that local
governments would have a hard time funding in UNRWA's absence
and, in the case of Lebanon, would refuse in fear that such
steps would lead to the refugees' permanent resettlement.
With 22,000 mostly Palestinian staff, UNRWA also is a
significant employer of a population whose unemployment rate
is universally higher than that of the local populace. (The
unemployment rate for Palestinians in Lebanon, for example,
is estimated at 60 percent.)


3. (C) Perhaps most important, UNRWA is one of the few
organizations able to instill Western-based values -- a
critical counterweight in an increasingly marginalized
population that could easily be politically activated in the
event of further regional tensions. It also provides a
secular alternative to the Islamic charitable organizations
working in the camps, many of which promote unhelpful
political agendas and have links to suspect organizations.
Continued, strong USG support for UNRWA is essential to our
strategic interests in the region. Here are just a few
examples of UNRWA's relevance outside the West Bank and Gaza,
in places that normally do not make the news.

JORDAN
--------------


4. (SBU) Jordan has more registered Palestinian refugees
than the West Bank and Gaza combined (1.6 million in Jordan,
1.4 million in the West Bank and Gaza). With an annual
budget in Jordan of USD 71 million, UNRWA provides services
to this poor, politically active population that the
Government of Jordan could not support without major new
international assistance. UNRWA is the secular, apolitical
alternative to Islamic charitable organizations -- some with

a political agenda. As UNRWA's largest donor, the U.S. has
significant influence over UNRWA programs and policies, where
it would have none with alternative organizations.


5. (C) GOJ officials have told us that any reduction in US
support for UNRWA would have devastating operational and
political ramifications in Jordan. With the U.S. providing
at least 25 percent of UNRWA's annual operating budget, any
reduction in U.S. funding would force UNRWA to cut its
services significantly. A reduction in U.S. funding for
UNRWA also would be a blow to peace in the region, as UNRWA
always has been viewed as a symbol of hope that the
Palestinians have not been forgotten. Palestinian refugees
in Jordan would interpret funding cuts as a sign that UNRWA
was being phased out and their internationally recognized
claims eliminated without a political settlement. We agree
with Jordanian officials who believe that this would be yet
another challenge to the long-term stability of the Kingdom.

LEBANON
--------------


6. (SBU) UNRWA records indicate that 375,000 registered
Palestinian refugees live in Lebanon, yet most UNRWA
officials agree that the number is closer to 200,000. (Given
the difficult conditions in Lebanon, most refugees who have
been able to leave have left.) The 200,000 refugees in
Lebanon constitute the neediest of UNRWA's lot, excluded by
Lebanese law from working in 72 different professions, owning
property or even improving the infrastructure in the camps.
With neither national ID's nor significant income, the
Palestinian refugees in Lebanon are far more dependent on
UNRWA services than those in any other area. UNRWA's USD 48
million annual budget in Lebanon covers health and education
services that are not provided in other UNRWA fields, such as
extended hospitalization payments and secondary education.


7. (SBU) Given Lebanon's fragile political balance,
stability among the historically activist Palestinian refugee
community is essential. UNRWA is the largest provider of
services to Palestinian refugees, and one of the few truly
apolitical organizations working in the camps.

SYRIA
--------------


8. (SBU) With an annual operating budget of USD 26 million,
UNRWA's Syria Field provides education, health and relief
services to the 400,000 Palestinian refugees resident in
Syria. As in Jordan, UNRWA's innovative social programs
allow the U.S., as a major UNRWA donor, to shape programs and
policies.


9. (C) Thanks to UNRWA, Syria is playing the unexpected role
of incubator for the potential resettlement of Palestinian
refugees within Arab countries. With significant support
from the USG, UNRWA's Syria field has developed plans to
resettle 300 refugee families from overcrowded World War II
barracks to a newly developed camp. With backing from the
European Commission, UNRWA and the SARG also are building
massive new water and sewerage links from its rural refugee
camps to neighboring Syrian towns. While insisting that its
own significant political and financial support for these
projects in no way diminishes the refugees' right of return,
the Syrian Government is in fact quietly laying the
groundwork for smooth absorption of Palestinian refugees into
Syrian society, should a political settlement be reached. It
serves U.S. interests to encourage this unannounced SARG
policy by continuing our support for UNRWA's operations in
Syria.


10. (C) Our cooperation with UNRWA also puts us in touch
with the Syrian agency in charge of Palestinian refugees,
GAPAR. Embassy Damascus and Amman-based refcoord have very
good relations with GAPAR. Like anti-narcotics and culture,
assistance to Palestinian refugees is one of the areas where
we have a cooperative, mutually beneficial relationship with
the SARG, despite the tensions in the overall bilateral
relationship.

Gnehm