Biden Administration Criticized for Not Imposing New Sanctions on Syria
With the US Treasury issuing exemptions for the Syrian regime to enable it to face the COVID-19 pandemic, criticism targeted US President Joe Biden’s handling of the Syrian file and his abstention from imposing new sanctions under the Caesar Act.
Although the US Treasury, which
issued the new guidance on Thursday afternoon, noted that they were part of the
administration’s efforts to review financial and economic sanctions in order to
ease COVID-19 assistance, the exemptions included two Syrian companies
affiliated with the regime, namely Letia and Polymedics.
According to the Treasury
statement, the two companies, which were sanctioned by the US in 2020, were
allowed to conduct all activities pertaining to the prevention, diagnosis or
treatment of the Covid-19 virus.
The Treasury also gave the green
light to practice “all transactions and activities related to the exportation,
re-exportation, sale, or supply, directly or indirectly, of services to Syria
that are related to the prevention, diagnosis, or treatment of COVID-19
(including research or clinical studies relating to COVID-19).”
The US Treasury said that this
general license comes in line with the clarifications it issued in April that
the sanctions pertaining to the Caesar Act did not include humanitarian aid
related to food and medicine. However, its timing coincided with the lifting of
sanctions on individuals accused of financing the regime of Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad, which raised several questions on Biden’s policy towards Syria.
Earlier this month, the Treasury
lifted sanctions on two companies affiliated with Syrian businessman Samer Foz.
The Treasury justified its decision by saying that it was due to a change in
the behavior of the groups on which sanctions were imposed.
This justification presented by
the Treasury Department did not convince the skeptical members of Congress,
especially since the move coincided with the start of the sixth round of the
Vienna negotiations with Iran over its nuclear deal, and before Biden’s meeting
with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, on Wednesday.
Congressmen accused the US
president of making concessions to both Iran and Russia, pointing to the
administration’s leniency with the Assad regime.
Rep. Congressman Joe Wilson said
that Samer Foz directly benefited from the regime’s war crimes and destruction
in Syria, and built luxurious communities on lands stolen from Syrians who were
forced to flee their homes.
These criticisms were not limited to
Republicans alone. Leading Democrats have joined them in calling on Biden to
implement the Caesar Act.
They put forward a draft
resolution in the Senate that coincided with the tenth anniversary of the
Syrian revolution, in which they urged Biden to implement the law and impose
sanctions. They recalled that the goal of Caesar Act was to hold the regime and
its international backers accountable for the “atrocities they committed
against the Syrian people”, and to strip it of resources to finance the war
machine.
The draft resolution also points
to the Iranian and Russian military role in supporting the regime and
participating in violations against civilians in order to advance their
interests, which led to the strengthening of extremist groups in the country.