
Donald Trump signs executive order lifting US sanctions on Syria
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt says the order is designed to 'promote and support the country's path to stability and peace.'
The executive order is meant to 'end the country's isolation from the international financial system, setting the stage for global commerce and galvanizing investments from its neighbours in the region, as well as from the United States,' said Brad Smith, US Treasury's acting undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence.
Washington granted Syria sweeping exemptions from sanctions in May, which was a first step towards fulfilling Trump's pledge to lift the half-a-century old of penalties on a country shattered by 13 years of brutal civil war.
Along with the lifting of economic sanctions, Monday's executive order lifts the national emergency outlined in an executive order issued by former Republican President George W. Bush.
Bush's order was in response to Syria's occupation of Lebanon and the pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and missile programs, Treasury officials said. Five other previous executive orders related to Syria were also lifted.
Monday's order does not however revoke sanctions imposed on ousted former President Bashar al-Assad, his top aides, family members and officials who had been determined to have committed human rights abuses, been involved in drug trafficking or part of Syria's chemical weapons programme.
It also leaves intact a major set of sanctions passed by Congress targeting anyone doing business with or offering support to Syria's military, intelligence or other suspect institutions.
While the Trump administration has passed temporary waivers on those sanctions, known as the Caesar Act, they can only be permanently rescinded by law.
Sanctions targeting terrorist groups and manufacturers and sellers of the amphetamine-like stimulant Captagon, which al-Assad regime officials were widely accused of having benefited from its trade in the Middle East, will remain in place.
Trump met with al-Sharaa in the Saudi Arabian capital, Riyadh, in May as part of his three country tour of the Middle East. The 47th US president told his Syrian counterpart he would lift sanctions and explore normalising relations in a major policy shift between Washington and Damascus.
'This is another promise made and promise kept,' Leavitt said Monday.
Since Trump's first announcement in Riyadh of removing sanctions on Syria, the European Union and United Kingdom have since followed suit. The EU has lifted nearly all of its remaining sanctions on Syria.
While Trump's order is a major move for Damascus, carrying potentially major positive effects on its struggling economy, some restrictions still remain in place.
The US has still not removed its designation of Syria as a state-sponsor of terrorism. The group al-Sharaa led – Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) – is also still regarded as a foreign terror organisation. A State Department official says those designations are being reviewed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
19 minutes ago
- Euronews
Tesla sales fell sharply in the last three months—is Musk to blame?
Sales of Tesla electric cars fell sharply in the last three months as boycotts over Elon Musk's political views continue to keep buyers away, a significant development given expectations that anger with the company's billionaire CEO would have faded by now. The company reported a 13% plunge in sales on Wednesday, in another sign that Musk's previous support of US President Donald Trump and far-right politicians in Europe has had a deep and enduring hit to Tesla's brand appeal. In response to the company report, the EV maker's shares rose modestly in early trading, as the figures were better than expected. However, sales fell to 384,122 in April through June, down from 443,956 in the same period last year. During this period, Musk formally left the Trump administration as a cost-cutting czar and hopes rose that sales would recover. Sales of the Models 3 and Y totalled 373,728, which was above the estimate of 356,000 from Wall Street analysts. The new figures also suggest that Tesla could disappoint when it announces second-quarter earnings later this month. In the first three months of this year, net income fell 71%. So far this year, Tesla's share price has lost 24.2%. Tesla is also facing stiff competition from other electric carmakers, especially in Europe, where China's BYD has taken a bite out of its market share. Musk has acknowledged that his work as head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and his embrace of European far-right candidates have hurt the company. But he attributed much of the sales plunge to customers holding off while they waited for new versions of Tesla's best-selling Model Y, and recently predicted a major turnaround in sales. The EV carmaker could face the consequences of its CEO and the US President clashing over Trump's tax bill, turning the former allies against each other. Just a day before the figures were published, Tesla shares lost around 7% as Trump suggested in a social media post that if Musk lost his government contracts, he 'would probably have to close up shop and head back home to South Africa.' Meanwhile, US tax credits that were partially fuelling EV sales could soon be over. Senate Republicans passed a multitrillion-dollar tax-and-spending package, Trump's "big beautiful bill", which axes the $7,500 (€6,375) EV tax credit after September 2025. Tesla's latest figures come as the company is focusing less on coming out with new models and more on robots, self-driving technology and robotaxis ferrying passengers around without anyone behind the wheel. Tesla is currently trialling robotaxis in Austin, Texas, which, so far, has gone smoothly for the most part. It has drawn the scrutiny of federal car safety regulators due of a few mishaps, including one case in which a Tesla taxi was shown, on a widely shared video, driving onto the wrong side of the road.


France 24
41 minutes ago
- France 24
Tesla reports lower car sales but figures better than feared
The EV maker reported 384,122 deliveries in the second quarter, down 13.5 percent from the year-ago period. Shares rallied after the disclosure, which was better than some leading forecasts in recent days. The sales figures released Wednesday, which are global, reflect the more contested nature of the EV market, which Tesla once dominated, but which now also features BYD and other low-cost Chinese companies, as well as legacy western automakers like General Motors, Toyota and Volkswagen. But Musk's political activism on behalf of right-wing figures has also made the company a target of boycotts and demonstrations, weighing on sales. In recent days, Musk has revived a feud with US President Donald Trump, dragging Tesla shares lower on Tuesday. The figures portend another poor round of earnings when Tesla reports results on July 23. Analysts currently project a drop of 16 percent to $1.2 billion in profits, according to S&P Capital IQ. Tesla has faced questions about its dearth of new retail auto products to wow consumers after Musk's futuristic Cybertruck proved polarizing. Analysts will be looking for an update on the state of new offerings after Tesla said in April that it planned "more affordable models" in the first half of 2025. The company has begun deliveries of its revamped Model Y in some markets, according to news reports. Tesla launched a long-discussed robotaxi venture in Austin, Texas, lending momentum to Musk's branding of the company as at the forefront of autonomous and artificial intelligence technology. But reports that the self-driving cars have driven recklessly have prompted oversight from US regulators. Heading into Wednesday's sales figure release, notes from JPMorgan Chase and Deutsche Bank had forecast bigger drops in second-quarter deliveries, citing poor figures in Europe especially. The JPMorgan note was especially bearish, setting a December share price target of $115, down more than 60 percent from today's levels and citing an expected drag from the elimination of US tax credits for EVs under Trump's legislation moving through Congress. But Wedbush's Dan Ives said Wednesday's "better-than-feared" report set the stage for growth. "If Musk continues to lead and remain in the driver's seat, we believe Tesla is on a path to an accelerated growth path over the coming years with deliveries expected to ramp in the back-half of 2025 following the Model Y refresh cycle," Ives said. Political wildcard A wildcard remains how Musk's shifting relationship with Trump could affect Tesla. Musk donated more than $270 million to Trump's 2024 campaign, barnstorming key battleground states for the Republican. After the election, he oversaw the launch of the "Department of Government Efficiency," a controversial initiative that eliminated thousands of government jobs that DOGE said were part of a pattern of waste, fraud and abuse. But Musk has broken with Trump over the White House's flagship tax and spending bill, which Musk rated as wasteful and misguided. Musk has called the bill "utterly insane and destructive" and accused bill supporters of backing "debt slavery." In response, Trump has threatened to target Musk's business empire and warned of deporting the South African-born Musk. Tesla shares fell more than five percent on Tuesday following this back and forth. "This high-profile feud introduces political risk," said in a note Tuesday. © 2025 AFP


Euronews
an hour ago
- Euronews
How could the US-China trade rearrangement affect Europe?
Since United States President Donald Trump's inauguration, he has announced more than 50 new or revised tariffs, including pauses, backdowns, escalations and de-escalations. As the state of US-China trade relations remains uncertain, many US firms are considering alternative sources of supply. Without a shift to different sources, prices may rise, and US companies and consumers might need to reduce or replace one product with another, virtually similar one. In this scenario, Europe could play a key role, both as an exporter and an importer. "Europe faces an increasingly difficult challenge: how to transition from being a recipient of decisions made by China and the US to actively shaping its own future," stated Francesca Ghiretti, director of the RAND Europe China Initiative, in a commentary piece. On average, Europe already supplies 55% of the available global export market for products which the US imports from China. According to nine varied simulations conducted by the global management consulting firm McKinsey & Company, the European Union, along with Norway, Switzerland, and the UK, could potentially replace about 30% to 65% of US imports from China with its exports, even in the face of high US tariffs on European goods. In each simulation, it is assumed that the value of US imports from China for each product falls to zero, and that instead, the US sources each product from other exporters. Products trade Europe's role in this scenario is most pronounced when it comes to electronics, other manufacturing, and textiles. The US has $191 billion, $52 billion, and $45 billion within each of these industries to rearrange, respectively. These are the same sectors for which the US currently imports mainly from China. In electronics, especially, Europe could be the primary substitute supplier in the US market. Another example is toys. Europe could supply the US market with Czech and German toys, replacing those made in China. This could see European consumers increasingly buy Chinese-made toys. As Europe has increased its exports to the US, it has also become a significant destination for Chinese exports, absorbing up to 55% of China's current shipments to the US. This shift could lead to deeper trade interdependence between Europe and China, as well as geopolitical tensions. "The next months and years will challenge whether Europe can stay the course, or it will lose itself trying to respond to ongoing challenges," said Francesca Ghiretti.