The editors of the Washington Post call for a lifting of sanctions against Syria:
More than three months since the overthrow of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Damascus, the country remains in a desperate situation. Fourteen years of civil war have shattered the economy. Ninety percent of Syrians live below the poverty line, 1 in 4 are jobless and half of the children are out of school. Seven million people survive in tents and makeshift shelters, and some 16.5 million rely on humanitarian assistance to meet their basic needs. The central bank has too little cash to pay salaries, and the Syrian pound, the national currency, is scarce.
The new government, a rebel coalition led by the Islamist militia group Hay?at Tahrir al-Sham, is struggling to impose security. A recent clash between remnants of the ousted regime’s armed supporters and the government’s security forces left hundreds dead, most of them members of Assad’s Alawite minority based in Syria’s coastal provinces. There were clashes with the minority Druze community outside Damascus. Kidnappings and reprisal killings have surged. And Israel has launched scores of airstrikes and raids targeting weapons depots while building its own military outposts.
Fixing the economic mess, imposing security and preventing the country from splintering along sectarian lines are the daunting challenges facing Syria’s interim president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, formerly known by his nom de guerre, Abu Mohammed al-Jolani. He needs all the help he can get — including from the United States. One thing the Trump administration could do right away is lift the crushing U.S. economic sanctions that hinder Syria’s recovery.
Their argument, essentially, is that unless we lift economic sanctions from the radical Islamic Sunni Arab government Syria will become a failed state.
Syria is already a failed state. The editors opposed the Assad government because Assad was a tyrant. al-Sharaa is a tyrant but, apparently, they support him. Worse than just being a tyrant, he is a radical Islamist Sunni Arab tyrant. Remember the guys who launched the largest terrorist attacks against the United States in our history in 2001? They guys who massacred and enslaved the Yezidis in Iraq?
The multi-ethnic, multi-confessional Syria we have known for the last 80 years is gone, replaced by a government whose soldiers are killing hundreds of Syrians who are Alawites, Druze, or Christians. Any notion that post-Assad Syria will be a liberal democracy is a fantasy. Yes, Syria is desperately poor. It is desperately poor because it is run by tyrants. If we lift sanctions, Syria will continue to be desperately poor but it will make it easier for today’s tyrants to continue their pogroms against Alawites, Christians, and Druze and the tyrants will become rich. Supporting Syria’s latest tyrant is not in the U. S. interest.
I literally have no idea of what the editors of the Washington Post believe in and editorials like this do nothing to clarify their views. Are they nihilists? There are many wiser foreign policy analysts on Substack.