HR-4427-119
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 31 - 23.
Sponsored by Michael Lawler (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would require federal agencies to review and report on banking restrictions, anti-money laundering measures, and sanctions related to Syria. It would direct the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) to evaluate a 2025 exemption granted to the Commercial Bank of Syria, instruct U.S. representatives at the IMF and World Bank to support economic monitoring and technical assistance for Syria, and require the Export-Import Bank to review its country restrictions on Syria. It would also amend the Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act of 2019 to update the conditions Syria must meet before sanctions are lifted and set a hard expiration date of December 31, 2029 for those sanctions.
Who benefits
Syrian civilians who may gain improved access to humanitarian aid, medical care, and international financial systems if sanctions are eased under the updated conditions. U.S. and international businesses seeking to operate in Syria if restrictions are relaxed. Syrian religious minorities and political prisoners, whose protections are explicitly added as new conditions. International organizations working on Syria's economic reconstruction. The new Syrian government, which could gain access to IMF and World Bank technical assistance. U.S. financial institutions that may gain clearer regulatory guidance on Syria-related transactions.
Who is hurt
Advocates for stricter Syria sanctions who argue removing the 180-day renewal cap weakens congressional oversight of the executive branch's waiver authority. Syrian opposition groups or human rights organizations that preferred the existing, more frequently reviewed sanctions framework. Competitors of U.S. businesses who may lose a relative advantage if U.S. firms gain earlier access to Syrian markets. Captagon trafficking networks, which would face new explicit sanctions pressure. Potentially, U.S. taxpayers if IMF/World Bank technical assistance programs directed by this bill involve U.S. financial contributions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the original Caesar Act's 180-day renewal caps created unnecessary bureaucratic friction that slowed legitimate humanitarian and economic engagement without meaningfully strengthening accountability. They contend that adding new conditions — including combating Captagon trafficking and protecting religious minorities — actually tightens the criteria Syria must meet, while the 2029 sunset provides a firm deadline that preserves congressional leverage. They also argue that directing U.S. votes at the IMF and World Bank toward anti-money laundering and economic monitoring advances U.S. national security interests by reducing illicit financial flows from Syria.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that removing the 180-day renewal requirement for waivers reduces the frequency of mandatory congressional review, effectively giving the executive branch more discretion to extend sanctions relief without regular legislative check-ins. They contend that the 2029 hard sunset could force automatic expiration of sanctions even if Syria has not meaningfully met the stated conditions, potentially rewarding a government that has not demonstrated sufficient accountability for past atrocities. They further argue that directing U.S. support for IMF and World Bank engagement with Syria may be premature given unresolved questions about the new Syrian government's human rights record and institutional stability.