Washington: Congress included a repeal of the 2019 Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act in the compromise National Defense Authorization Act unveiled this week, and both chambers prepared votes within days. The provision removes automatic sanctions mechanisms and requires White House certification on counter-IS efforts, minority protections and restraint toward neighbors. The House approved the repeal and sent the NDAA forward; senators signaled swift consideration. U.S. lawmakers Jim Risch, Jeanne Shaheen and Rep. Joe Wilson publicly supported repeal, and Syrian groups announced the measure's finalization. The bill awaits presidential signature to take effect. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
The repeal primarily benefits the Syrian government and affiliated actors by removing the Caesar Act’s sanctions framework, and benefits U.S. lawmakers and diplomats seeking policy normalization and economic re-engagement with Syria.
Human rights advocates and legal claimants relying on Caesar-era sanctions for accountability will lose a key enforcement mechanism, and sanctions-enforcement entities will lose leverage over the Syrian regime.
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U.S. Moves to Repeal Caesar Sanctions in NDAA
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