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The Caesar Act Comes Into Force (Part 1): Increasing the Assad Regime’s Isolation

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Dana Stroul and Katherine Bauer

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June 11, 2020

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New Syria sanctions signal bipartisan support for continued diplomatic isolation and economic coercion, but their impact ultimately depends on whether the executive branch is willing to prioritize the issue.

When President Trump signed the latest National Defense Authorization Act into law last December, he also authorized the bipartisan Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act, named for the Syrian military defector who exposed a trove of evidence documenting the Assad regime’s war crimes. The legislation imposes sanctions on governments, companies, or individuals indirectly funding Bashar al-Assad’s regime or contributing to its military campaigns. Anticipation of Caesar sanctions is already driving perceptions of risk about doing business in Syria, and as the June 17 deadline for implementation approaches, many believe that the resultant actions will increase economic pain on the regime’s supporters.

Assad and his allies have reasserted control over most of the country through ongoing military advances on the ground, and in light of this reality, Russia has been encouraging others to accept that Assad is here to stay, welcome him back into the international fold, and fund Syria’s reconstruction. The Caesar Act rejects this premise: if effectively implemented, the new sanctions authorities could deter even U.S. partners from participating in reconstruction or otherwise expanding ties with Syria under an unreformed Assad regime. This two-part PolicyWatch examines the policy issues and targeting criteria that will shape this implementation; Part 1 looks at Syria sanctions, while Part 2 discusses how the legislation might be used against Hezbollah in Lebanon.

ARE CAESAR SANCTIONS THE MISSING PIECE?
The new sanctions authorities in the Caesar Act target entities operating for the Assad regime’s benefit in four sectors: oil/natural gas, military aircraft, construction, and engineering (for full PDF text of the act, see page 1,093 of the National Defense Authorization Act). This includes direct and indirect support to the regime, such as support to Iranian- and Russian-backed militias operating in Syria. Additionally, the act requires the Trump administration to determine whether the Central Bank of Syria is an entity of “primary money laundering concern” pursuant to Section 311 of the USA PATRIOT ACT.

Most of this activity is already sanctionable under a series of Obama-era executive orders, including E.O. 13582 (2011), which blocked the property of the Syrian government, of entities that provide it with technological, material or financial support, and of entities that work for it or act on its behalf. For example, the Trump administration has argued that the Central Bank of Syria is subject to sanctions under this order; the bank is subject to European Union sanctions as well. Separately, numerous Syrian individuals and entities are already subject to U.S. conduct-based sanctions for terrorism support, corruption, human rights abuses, weapons of mass destruction proliferation, or other violations.

To date, the strategy of targeting the regime directly—including via sanctions adopted by the multilateral “Friends of Syria” group in 2011 and by the U.S. government years earlier—has failed to change Assad’s behavior. This is principally because Russia and Iran have given him decisive military, financial, and diplomatic support. Although they lack the finances to rebuild Syria, Caesar sanctions are unlikely to shift their commitment to the regime’s survival; besides, both governments and their networks are already under extensive U.S.-led sanctions for actions inside or outside the Syrian context.

WHO MIGHT BE TARGETED?
Despite the existing sanctions risk, foreign investors remain interested in Syrian business opportunities, particularly firms in the Persian Gulf states and Eastern Europe. For example, after last year’s diplomatic thaw between the United Arab Emirates and Assad, a delegation of Syrian businessmen, including U.S.- and EU-sanctioned individuals, attended an Emirati-organized private-sector forum in Abu Dhabi. Later in 2019, a sizable Emirati delegation attended the annual Damascus International Trade Fair. By reestablishing its presence in Syria, the UAE seemingly hoped to counterbalance Iranian influence, and it has since come under significant U.S. pressure to avoid running afoul of sanctions. Nevertheless, Emirati, Saudi, and Kuwaiti investors have reportedly continued to form companies or seek licenses to operate in Syria’s construction and tourism sectors.

A number of Lebanon-based firms also remain active there, including in sectors targeted by the Caesar Act (e.g., oil and gas). Some of these firms are Lebanese-owned, while others were established by Syrian elites. The act’s looming implementation has raised concerns in Lebanon about exposure to Caesar sanctions, which could push the country’s teetering economy closer to the edge.

In the end, the legislation’s impact will lie in both the signals Washington sends and its willingness to enforce sanctions, even on firms or governments partnered with the United States. The administration will need to make clear that Syria remains closed for rehabilitation or business under its current conditions, and demonstrate a renewed effort to deter those who seek to profit from reconstruction activities overseen by an unreformed regime.

THE CAESAR ACT AND SANCTIONS RELIEF
The United States ostensibly aims to end the Syria war via a UN-run political process that leads to an inclusive, representative government in Damascus. The Trump administration no longer maintains that Assad must exit power, but it does insist that his regime’s behavior change.

Toward this end, the Caesar Act articulates an end state by establishing criteria that the regime and its allies must meet before sanctions can be lifted, such as:

  • Halting the Syrian-Russia air campaign and its deliberate targeting of civilians and civilian structures
  • Allowing unfettered humanitarian access to areas under regime/Russian/Iranian control, in keeping with Washington’s interests as the largest donor of aid to Syria
  • Releasing all political prisoners
  • Taking steps toward compliance with international treaties related to biological, nuclear, and chemical weapons
  • Facilitating the safe, voluntary, and dignified return of refugees
  • Establishing a genuine accountability, truth, and reconciliation process.
Notably, these criteria do not include a demand that the regime engage in the UN-led political process or insist on Assad’s departure. Yet the act’s tough conditions suggest that a drastically different regime would have to be in power before they can be lifted. In that sense, imposing Caesar sanctions can help signal long-term U.S. commitment to fundamental changes in Syria. The law’s focus on accountability sets a high bar, since Assad will never concede to investigations that implicate him and his regime in the commission of war crimes. If effectively implemented by the State and Treasury Departments and skillfully messaged to the necessary audiences, Caesar sanctions can make governments and companies think twice before reestablishing relations with the regime in its current form or pursuing lucrative reconstruction contracts.

CONCLUSION
Under Assad, life in Syria is increasingly unbearable—hyperinflation and a currency nosedive have sent the cost of food and medicine beyond the reach of most citizens, protestors have taken to the streets again in some areas, and the regime is still committing daily atrocities. The Lebanese financial crisis next door and the COVID-19 pandemic across the region have exacerbated the economic collapse, adding to the daily hardships of those living in regime-controlled areas and straining the resources of Assad’s backers in Moscow and Tehran.

Despite this dire picture, the regime offensive to extend control over the remaining opposition-held area in Idlib province appears to be restarting. Even under the most unsustainable conditions—depleted military forces, a collapsed economy, strained allies, and a global pandemic—Assad is still pursuing a strategy of military besiegement and terrorizing his own people.

U.S. policy relies on political isolation and economic sanctions to make life so untenable for Assad and his cronies that he is forced to engage meaningfully in the UN process. Successive rounds of direct sanctions have thus far not deterred him from his objective of military victory, which he likely believes will establish facts on the ground that allow him to dispense with the UN process. Yet the Caesar Act aims to counter any such wishful thinking, making clear to Damascus, Moscow, Tehran, and entities profiting from Assad’s war economy that Washington will not simply accept an unreformed regime in Syria.

To be sure, June 17 will not deliver a decisive blow to a regime that has proven its durability. The Caesar Act’s effectiveness will depend on whether the administration can adequately resource its sanctions architecture while aggressively pursuing a diplomatic off-ramp to a political process. The Treasury Department will need to keep up a steady drumbeat of new designations to deter investment and reconstruction. This will require the administration to prioritize Syria and ensure that those working on new sets of Caesar sanctions have the support and resources necessary to stay on course for the long haul.

Dana Stroul is the Kassen Fellow at The Washington Institute and a former senior professional staff member on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Katherine Bauer is the Institute’s Blumenstein-Katz Family Fellow and a former official at the U.S. Treasury Department.
https://www.washingtoninstitute.org...e-part-1-increasing-the-assad-regimes-isolati
 
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Caesar Act: How will new US sanctions on Syria be different?
Analysts say 'far-reaching' US legislation targeting President al-Assad's government will also hit Syrian civilians hard

New US sanctions on Syria coming into force this week intend to pressure the government of President Bashar al-Assad into enacting human rights reforms much more strongly than previous sanctions.

Although UN sanctions on Syria are nonexistent because of Russian and Chinese vetoes against such a move, many countries - including the US and EU member states - have unilaterally imposed punishing sanctions on the Syrian government since the start of the 2011 uprising. But their effectiveness has been questionable.

On the other hand, the new raft of US sanctions, known as the Caesar Act, targets companies, institutions and individuals - both Syrian and foreign - that do business with the government of President Bashar al-Assad by authorising bans and financial sanctions on current and potential Syrian partners.

Named after the pseudonym used by a Syrian military officer who leaked more than 50,000 photos documenting torture and other human rights violations and atrocities in al-Assad's prisons, the legislation received bipartisan Congressional support, allowing it to pass in December last year as part of the US's annual defence spending.

From Wednesday, the act will target supporters of the al-Assad government in politics, business and banking, reaching all the way to Lebanon's Hezbollah and partners in Iran, Russia and even Gulf states and Europe, with individuals potentially facing travel bans or even arrest.

"The new US sanctions will be far broader in terms of their sectoral targeting, but also, critically, will involve US targeting of other countries and businesses seeking to do business with the Syrian government in a bid to ensure Syria's tightening economic isolation," Julien Barnes-Dacey, director of the Middle East and North Africa programme at the European Council of Foreign Relations (ECFR), told Al Jazeera.

According to Zaki Mehchy, a senior consulting fellow at Chatham House and co-founder of the Syrian Centre for Policy Research, the sanctions have an implicit message as well.

"The act is a direct message to punish the Syrian regime's allies and an indirect message to Gulf countries and some European countries that are trying to normalise their relations with Assad," he said.

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The Caesar Act was named after the pseudonym used by a Syrian military officer who leaked more than 50,000 photos documenting torture and other human rights violations and atrocities in al-Assad's prisons [File: Khalil Ashawi/Reuters]

'Ineffective' previous sanctions
US sanctions on Syria go all the way back to 1979, when Washington listed Damascus as a sponsor of "terrorism", imposing restrictions on the trade of "dual-use" products with Syria that can be used for both military and civilian purposes.

US pressure on the Syrian government then expanded with a 2011 executive order that banned trade in Syrian oil after it prohibited in 2004 the export of US goods - except for food and medicine.

Rami Makhlouf rejects gov't demand he step down from Syriatel (6:26)
More recently, Washington sanctioned specific Syrian individuals and institutions after it held the government responsible for a deadly sarin gas attack that killed more than 80 people, including women and children, in the northern Syrian town of Khan Sheikhoun in April 2017.

While these sanctions targeted the Syrian military or security personnel, business people, and government and private companies working mainly in the oil and gas and banking sectors, their impact was limited in restricting the al-Assad government's ability to trade and secure external financial support.

According to Barnes-Dacey, US sanctions to date, which he described as a "combination of both targeted measures against individuals complicit in war crimes and those seen as helping prop up the regime" have had a "narrower" impact compared with the new legislation.

Rim Turkmani, research fellow at the Conflict and Civil Society Research Unit at the London School of Economics, cast doubt on the effectiveness of previous sanctions.

"The main aims of the sanctions were to change the regime or/and to change its behaviour so that it doesn't use excessive violence against civilians. Clearly, both aims were not achieved," she said.

Mehchy said the sanctions had not only "failed to change the regime or its behaviour" but also "hit ordinary people the most ... and led to the emergence of warlords and new cronies that are able to overcome sanctions through their illegal international connections and networks".

Powerful, but concerning
When it comes to the Caesar Act, however, experts agreed the new sanctions will have a hugely chilling effect, even though many remained uncertain how they will be imposed.

"There is still huge uncertainty about how exactly the sanctions will be implemented," said Barnes-Dacey. "The end result will be a hugely restrictive environment for anyone wanting to do business in Syria, extending from the private sector all the way across to humanitarian activities despite technical exemptions.

"The country is already devastated, and these measures will help to push it over the edge in a way that is highly unlikely to deliver a positive outcome in terms of the regime making serious concessions or Russia deciding to suddenly force Damascus in a desired new direction," Barnes-Dacey said.

Syria's economy has been in freefall over the past few months with the pound losing about 70 percent of its value, making the price of basic commodities now unaffordable to many Syrians. The economic pinch has led to protests breaking out in government strongholds, such as Latakia and Suweida, which have rarely been seen against al-Assad.

Syria's dependence on neighbouring Lebanon's banking system for access to financial networks and US dollars has been key in pushing Syria over the edge. Lebanon is in the throes of a parallel fall in the official value of the lira, a full-blown economic crisis, and worsening civil unrest that has pushed thousands of people onto the streets to demand change.

Analysts say the impending legislation may be a double-edged sword that might not just impact the al-Assad government and its local and foreign backers, but humanitarian efforts and civilians in Syria and Lebanon - whose collapsing economies are closely interlinked.

"Lebanon will certainly be affected," said Turkmani. "Many Lebanese banks and institutions act as an alternative for the Syrian state and also many people."

Despite these concerns, analysts say Syria's imploding economy after years of war, mismanagement, and corruption was caused by the government, and civilians are likely to suffer the most from the new US sanctions.

"The Assad government maintains control over the Syrian economy and its institutions, making it an incredibly difficult task to target it for its war crimes without affecting the people," said Ibrahim Olabi, a lawyer at the London-based Guernica 37 Chambers and founder of the Syrian Legal Development Programme.

"It is critical that the US puts a huge effort in making sure it affects those who deserve to be affected," he warned, adding, "practically, this will not be an easy task due to lack of transparency in Syria and disinformation tactics adopted by the regime and its allies".
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/caesar-act-sanctions-syria-200615103238508.html
 
Can you believe our Prophet salla allahu aleihi wa sallam prophesied this #Caesar_Law ?
He said (I trying to translate to the max the meaning):"Iraq would be prevented from its currency"
The companions said :"From whom oh prophet of Allah ?"
He replied:"from the Ajam(non arabs)"
Then he added:"Sham (the Levant which includes modern day Syria,Lebanon,Palestine,some parts of Jordan) would be prevented from its currency"
The companions said :"From whom oh prophet of Allah ?"
He replied:"from the Room(Romans)"
Then he added:"Egypt would dry out "
End of the Hadit.
Now tell me, who do you think the non arabs who besieged Iraq ? it was indeed the UN embargo under the Oil for food programme back when Saddam ruled Iraq, and Now we are living the besiege of Sham by the US CLEARLY.
and next Egypt's turn will come !!
 
Can you believe our Prophet salla allahu aleihi wa sallam prophesied this #Caesar_Law ?
He said (I trying to translate to the max the meaning):"Iraq would be prevented from its currency"
The companions said :"From whom oh prophet of Allah ?"
He replied:"from the Ajam(non arabs)"
Then he added:"Sham (the Levant which includes modern day Syria,Lebanon,Palestine,some parts of Jordan) would be prevented from its currency"
The companions said :"From whom oh prophet of Allah ?"
He replied:"from the Room(Romans)"
Then he added:"Egypt would dry out "
End of the Hadit.
Now tell me, who do you think the non arabs who besieged Iraq ? it was indeed the UN embargo under the Oil for food programme back when Saddam ruled Iraq, and Now we are living the besiege of Sham by the US CLEARLY.
and next Egypt's turn will come !!

When u use hadith of the Prophet SAW, then its important to quote the source of it.
 
Sahih muslim, chapter, hadith number. I guess u dont know much about proper citation. It helps others too and others can easily look it up.
ok ok, here is the coordinates,
narrator:Jaber Ibn Abdellah.
the Muhaddit : Imam Muslim
the source: Sahih Muslim
The Chapter : The Book of Tribulations and Portents of the Last Hour
Here it is for online reading
https://sunnah.com/muslim/54/81
 

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