The U.S. special envoy for Syria on Monday called on the House of Representatives to follow the Senate’s lead and repeal long-standing sanctions on Syria, saying the measures had fulfilled their purpose under the Assad regime but now hinder the country’s recovery.
"The U.S. Senate has already demonstrated foresight by voting to repeal the Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act - a sanctions regime that served its moral purpose against the previous, treacherous Assad regime but now suffocates a nation seeking to rebuild," Tom Barrack, who also serves as U.S. ambassador to Türkiye, said on the social media platform X.
"To repeal Caesar is not to forget history, it is to shape it anew, replacing the lexicon of retribution with the language of renewal," he said.
Noting previous steps by U.S. President Donald Trump and the Senate towards ending the sanctions, Barrack said the House of Representatives should "complete the act of statesmanship" and repeal the Caesar Act to restore to the Syrian people the "right to work, to trade, and to hope."
Saying the 2019 passage of the Caesar Act was "the moral instrument of that moment," when Assad was still in power, Barrack called Trump's announcement this May that he would lift sanctions on Syria a "historic pivot from coercion to cooperation."








