By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
President Trump will
meet Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who, oddly enough, once
ordered the
murder of Jamal Khashoggi, whose body was cut into pieces and the way
carried out of the Embassy in backpacks.
During his trip to
the Middle East in mid-May, U.S. President Donald Trump did something
extraordinary. On the Saudi leg of his four-day tour, the president issued a
sweeping change to U.S. policy toward Syria. First, he announced, to riotous
applause in Riyadh, that the United States would suspend all sanctions on the
country as the Syrian government navigates a difficult transition following the
collapse of the Bashar al-Assad regime in December. The following day, Trump
met publicly with Syria’s interim president,
Ahmed al-Shara, a former al-Qaeda fighter who just months ago had a $10 million
U.S. government bounty on his head. After the meeting, Trump referred to Shara
as a young, attractive guy with a “strong past.”
In taking these
abrupt steps, Trump skirted what in any other U.S. administration would likely
have been a long and tedious policymaking process. For months, many Syrians and
Syria watchers had worried that the United States might never lift its sanctions.
Washington first imposed sanctions on Syria in 1979, when it declared its
regime to be a state sponsor of terrorism, triggering a ban on arms sales and
other restrictions on exports to the country. Congress imposed additional
sanctions in the early years of the twenty-first century. After Syria’s civil
war began in 2011, both the United States and Europe added further
restrictions. Armed groups within Syria—some of which are now represented in
the government in Damascus—were also issued terrorist designations and
therefore remain subject to sanctions. Together, these measures largely cut
Syria off from international trade and investment and have been a major barrier
to economic recovery in the war-ravaged country.
Syria’s need is
urgent. More than 90 percent of Syrians live below the poverty line, and 70
percent require humanitarian aid to meet basic needs. At the current rate of
growth, it would take Syria’s economy until at least 2080 to reach the GDP it
had before the civil war began in 2011. Dire economic conditions are worsened
by the communal violence and sectarian tensions that have flared since the fall
of the Assad regime, which was dominated by the Alawite minority, and the
seizure of the capital predominantly by Shara’s Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a
Sunni-affiliated former rebel group. Shara has promised to protect Syria’s
minorities, but some members of the Alawite, Druze, and other communities are
not convinced. External interference, including from Israel, which has launched
over 700 strikes on Syria and seized territory within the country, has deepened
the country’s instability. All these pressures are now mounting. Days after
Trump’s announcement, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee that the decision to lift sanctions came after U.S.
officials concluded that Syria’s transitional government could be “weeks, not
many months, away from potential collapse and a full-scale civil war of epic
proportions.”
Trump’s unexpected
pivot on sanctions was the right thing to do, and it could help Syria address
its current challenges. The toppling of the brutal Assad regime opened the door
to a better future for Syrians and for the region. But removing sanctions was
never going to be enough to pull the country away from the brink. Beginning to
lift U.S. sanctions is an important first step—one that has been amplified by
the European Union’s decision to lift most of its own sanctions on Syria—to
create favorable conditions for the foreign investment Syria desperately needs.
The United States and Syria’s other partners now need to clear the remaining
obstacles to stability and economic recovery, and do so quickly, rather than
let internal pressures and regional rivalries cause the country to unravel.
Celebrating the lifting of U.S. sanctions in Damascus,
Syria, May 2025
Economic Opportunity
The Trump
administration has already taken some steps to fulfill the president’s promise
to remove sanctions. Last week, the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign
Assets Control issued a license that immediately lifts most U.S. sanctions,
including those on Shara himself, although it does not remove foreign terrorism
designations and can be rescinded at any time. On the same day, the State
Department issued a 180-day waiver of sanctions imposed under the 2019 Caesar
Act, which will enable foreign governments, businesses, and individuals to do
business in Syria.
Waivers, however, are
only a partial solution. Without a permanent removal of sanctions, which in the
case of Caesar Act sanctions will require congressional approval, uncertainty
about whether sanctions will simply return in six months could hinder Syria’s
economic recovery. Some investors who are close to the Trump administration or
accustomed to working in sanctioned economies may not be deterred. But many
international companies and firms looking for long-term ventures may still
hesitate to invest. They could choose to play it safe and avoid
doing business in Syria altogether, as many have done throughout the country’s
civil war.
There is more that
the Trump administration can do. The State Department can work toward
declassifying HTS as a foreign terrorist organization, which would require
determining that the original conditions for the designation are no longer
applicable or that there are national security reasons for removing it. The
department should similarly aim to remove Syria’s designation as a state
sponsor of terror, on the basis of a fundamental
change in the country’s leadership and policies, along with assurances from the
current leadership that it is not supporting terrorism now, nor will it in the
future. Without these designation removals, relaxing export controls will
likely be difficult.
For now, sanctions
relief is already enabling Gulf countries and other actors to invest in Syria.
Three days after Trump’s sanctions announcement, an Emirati company signed an
$800 million memorandum of understanding with the interim government in Damascus
to develop the Syrian port of Tartus and establish industrial and free trade
zones. Qatar and Saudi Arabia have already paid Syria’s debt, allowing the
country to secure loans and cash infusions from international financial
institutions, such as the World Bank. Syria can also be reintegrated into the
global financial system. For example, reentering the SWIFT system, which is
vital for sending money between banks, international wire transfers, and other
payments, would facilitate remittances and other international transactions.
Under the Assad
regime, the Syrian economy barely stayed afloat, propped up by Iran and Russia,
drug trafficking, and humanitarian aid. Lifting sanctions would allow
reconstruction to begin in earnest. Syria’s oil and gas, raw materials, and
manufacturing sectors could be revived, generating revenue for the government
and providing livelihoods for many of the country’s citizens. The energy sector
in particular needs investment; Syria produced nearly 400,000 barrels of oil
per day in 2010, before the civil war, but by the time Assad fell last year,
that output had fallen to 40,000 to 80,000 barrels per day. On the individual
level, sanctions relief will help Syrians living abroad invest in their country
by making it easier to send money home. None of this progress is guaranteed—not
all reconstruction efforts will be attractive to investors, and the shutdown of
the U.S. Agency for International Development by the Trump administration
leaves a large gap that other funders will need to fill. But sanctions relief gives
Syria options beyond depending on other sanctioned countries and illicit
activities to survive.
Regional Rivals
Sanctions are not the
only obstacle threatening to destabilize Syria. Since the ouster of the Assad
regime, a competition has emerged to gain economic and
political advantage in the weakened country. One of the main players is Israel.
The Israeli military has launched hundreds of strikes into Syria and occupied
parts of southern Syria, and the Israeli government has stoked sectarian
division by claiming that the incursion is an attempt to protect the Druze
minority. Israel has also lobbied the United States to maintain sanctions on
Syria and allow Russia to keep its military bases in the country. The United
Arab Emirates has been mediating secret talks between Israel and Syria, and
Shara has said repeatedly that he does not want a war with Israel. The Syrian
government even returned the belongings of the Israeli spy Eli Cohen, who was
executed in Damascus in 1965 after his espionage was discovered, in a goodwill
gesture. But the Israeli occupation of Syrian territory continues. The Trump
administration’s outreach to Shara does seem to have softened Israel’s stance,
as Israeli airstrikes on the country have subsided in the days since. Now, the
U.S. president should further wield his leverage to rein in Israel’s disruptive
operations.
Other regional actors
have jumped into the fray, too, looking to ink investment deals with the new
Syrian government that may or may or not serve the country’s long-term
interests. In December, for example, Turkey announced a plan to negotiate an
exclusive economic zone agreement with Syria that would define maritime
boundaries to give each country exclusive rights to explore and exploit
resources, including oil and gas, within its zone. There may be an economic
benefit for Syria in such an accord, but it would also inflame disputes over
existing maritime boundaries in the eastern Mediterranean, putting Syria in
conflict with its neighbors.
Trump, and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 2025
There are ways that
Turkey can play a more constructive role. The Syrian government, free of
sanctions, could work with Ankara on its plans to build an energy transit
infrastructure connecting the Levant, the Gulf, and potentially Europe. Turkish
assistance to the Syrian military could deter attacks by foreign militaries or
the so-called Islamic State, as long as that support
does not compromise Syria’s independence or aggravate the security concerns of
other actors, particularly Israel.
An Israeli-Turkish
clash in Syria is a troubling possibility. In March, an Israeli news outlet
reported that the Israeli government was preparing for the possibility of such
a confrontation. More recently, Israel and Turkey have engaged in talks to dial
down tensions and establish a hotline for that purpose in Syria. Yet as the
Syrian government and its security forces rebuild, Israel and Turkey could vie
for influence over that process in ways short of direct military confrontation.
The U.S. government has likely already pushed Israel to step back by engaging
with the interim Syrian authorities, the Gulf states, and Turkey itself. But
continued U.S. diplomacy can help ensure that Syria does not once again become
a playground for regional rivalries.
For Syria to take
charge of its own defense, including conducting its own counterterrorism
operations, it will need the economic resources and international assistance to
reconstruct and unite its military and security services. Right now, the
security situation is tenuous. HTS does not control all areas of the country
and has trouble commanding some of the fighters within its ranks. It has even
less of a hold on other forces, such as the tens of thousands of fighters in
the Free Syrian Army, which takes more direction from Ankara than from
Damascus. Militias composed of former Assad regime elements have regrouped on
Syria’s coast, and the Islamic State is resurging in the east. Some Kurdish and
Druze armed groups have not given up on the prospect of autonomy in a
post-Assad Syria. Managing this fractured security environment will be
difficult without external support, including training on mitigating harm to
civilians. The challenge will be to build disciplined security and police
forces that protect, rather than extort from, the Syrian people. Syrians are
glad to be rid of the Assad regime’s checkpoints, set up to monitor citizens
and demand bribes—but they also fear a return to corruption and violence should
the country’s economic recovery falter.
Good Governance
Those fears are not
baseless. Syria is surrounded by cautionary tales of post-conflict mismanagement.
Corruption became entrenched in Iraq during the reconstruction process that
followed the U.S. invasion in 2003, and in Lebanon after the end of the 1975–90
civil war there. A handful of politicians and businesses grew wealthy at the
expense of basic services and economic development for the broader populations.
The failure of transitional governments to develop integrated economies led to
growing sectarian conflict and left vacuums for nonstate actors to fill. Iraq
is still struggling to diversify its oil-dependent economy and promote
sustainable development in its agriculture and energy sectors, in large part
because of endemic corruption and the interference of Iran and nonstate groups
in the Iraqi economy. Likewise, the productive sectors of the Lebanese economy
faltered as dependence on cheap imports increased in the postwar era. Warlords
turned politicians pursued infrastructure projects that benefited them
personally rather than fostering broad-based growth.
Past
experience with post-conflict
reconstruction around the world shows that transparency and inclusivity in
government decision-making are the best antidotes to corruption, economic
stagnation, and other common maladies in recovering countries. So far, however,
Washington’s demands of the new Syrian government have been limited to
security-related matters, such as the expulsion of foreign militants, and have
neglected the political and institutional reforms needed to ensure a peaceful
transition.
This is a mistake.
The aspirations that Syrians fought and died for must not be overlooked. Facing
no pressure from the United States—or from governments in the region that fear
a successful democratic movement in Syria that could inspire unrest in their
own countries—Shara has consolidated power. But if the Syrian government
ignores the will of Syrians who rose against Assad’s authoritarianism, it risks
reigniting conflict and reviving nefarious forces such as the Islamic State.
What happens in Syria
could affect stability well beyond its borders. Beginning in 2011, the Syrian
civil war displaced millions of people, creating a wave of refugees on Europe’s
borders. One result was the rise of far-right parties across Europe, which took
advantage of a popular backlash against migrants to draw a surge of electoral
support. The Iranian government, meanwhile, exploited the Assad regime’s
weakness to strengthen its influence across Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon,
destabilizing those countries and strengthening armed nonstate groups. Syria’s
pariah status under the Assad regime also made it impossible to take meaningful
steps toward regional integration, from negotiating trade deals to building new
gas pipelines.
Rather than repeating
that history, Syria’s post-Assad transition could be a catalyst for growth and
stabilization. When Trump announced that he was ending U.S. sanctions, he said
that the move gave Syrians “a chance at greatness.” To keep that chance alive,
his administration must build on the current momentum and ensure that the U.S.
government follows through on his promise—and that actors in Syria and across
the region do not spoil the process. Lifting sanctions was the first pivotal
step toward a stable, fruitful post-Assad transition in Syria. It must
certainly not be the last.
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