On 23 May 2025, the United States provided broad sanctions relief to Syria and the new Government of Syria under President Ahmed al-Sharaa. While speaking at an investment forum in Riyadh, President Trump announced his intentions to lift sanctions on Syria, stating that sanctions relief will “give them a chance at greatness.”

To that end, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued General License (GL) 25, authorizing transactions prohibited by the Syrian Sanctions Regulations (SySR), as well as transactions prohibited under certain other statutes and executive orders. Alongside GL 25, the US Department of State issued a 180-day waiver of mandatory “Caesar Act” sanctions to permit certain investments in Syria and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network permitted US banks to maintain correspondent accounts for the Commercial Bank of Syria.

Between 2004 and 2011, the United States imposed increasingly comprehensive sanctions on Syria, prohibiting most US investment in Syria, the export of goods and services to Syria, dealings in Syrian petroleum, and transactions involving Syrian blocked parties, including “secondary sanctions” for significant dealings with the blocked Government of Syria.

Under GL 25, US persons are authorized to engage in many transactions prohibited under the SySR, including:

It is important to note that GL 25 does not authorize:

Sanctions relief under GL 25 became effective on 23 May 2025 and is not subject to an expiration date. OFAC can revoke GL 25 at any time or replace it with a “GL 25A” requiring the “wind down” of existing transactions by a certain date. The Treasury Department has signaled that additional sanctions relief may be forthcoming, referring to GL 25 as a “first step.”

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