The US Treasury has sanctioned the Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad (PCPA) and six Gaza-based charities, designating them as part of what officials describe as a Hamas support network. The action freezes any US-linked assets held by the entities and makes it a crime for US persons to conduct transactions with them.
At the center of the designation is the allegation that PCPA helped organize humanitarian flotillas challenging Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza, not as independent civil society efforts, but as operations coordinated with Hamas. The distinction matters, because it transforms what organizers call aid delivery into what the US government now treats as material support for a designated terrorist organization.
What the Treasury is actually alleging
The core claim is straightforward: PCPA and the six charities functioned as nodes in a broader Hamas fundraising and logistics apparatus. US officials have pointed to a letter from former Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh that they say endorsed PCPA’s role in organizing flotilla operations, framing the relationship as more than coincidental alignment.
Israel’s defense ministry has made parallel moves, announcing its own sanctions on the Global Sumud Flotilla. Israeli officials have characterized the flotilla as a Hamas initiative disguised as humanitarian relief, a framing that dovetails neatly with Washington’s designation.
Across the Atlantic, UK authorities are separately investigating Zaher Birawi for potential terrorism-related sanctions over alleged ties to Hamas. Birawi denies any such connection.
The Freedom Flotilla Coalition, which has been involved in organizing the sea-borne aid missions, has rejected the US claims outright. The coalition has demanded that Washington present actual evidence for its allegations, arguing that the flotillas are run by independent civil society organizations with no operational link to Hamas.
The sanctions playbook and its ripple effects
Here’s the thing about Treasury designations: they don’t require a criminal conviction. The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) can freeze assets and prohibit transactions based on intelligence assessments and executive authority.
For the designated entities, the practical consequences are immediate. Any bank, payment processor, or financial institution touching the US dollar system must block transactions involving PCPA or the six charities. Correspondent banking relationships mean this isn’t limited to American soil. A European bank processing a dollar-denominated transfer that touches a sanctioned entity faces secondary sanctions risk.
Why crypto watchers should pay attention
Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and OFAC have repeatedly cited terrorism financing as a justification for expanding compliance requirements on crypto exchanges and decentralized finance protocols.
The sanctioning of Tornado Cash in 2022 was partly justified on the grounds that North Korean state hackers used the mixer to launder stolen funds. The legal challenge to those sanctions is still winding through courts.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

2 hours ago
12








English (US) ·