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Major Foreign Policy and Academic Figures Urge the U.S. to Take Further Action Against the Assad Regime

Major Foreign Policy and Academic Figures Urge the U.S. to Take Further Action Against the Assad Regime

In light of President Obama’s recent call for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to step down, The Foreign Policy Initiative Executive Director Jamie M. Fly and 32 other signatories have signed a letter urging President Obama to take additional, common-sense steps to further pressure the Assad regime and thus make clear that the United States stands firmly on the side of the Syrian people.

August 19, 2011
The Honorable Barack Obama
President of the United States
The White House

Washington, DC

Dear President Obama:

We commend you for your administration’s statement that “the future of Syria must be
determined by its people, but President Bashar al-Assad is standing in their way… For the sake
of the Syrian people, the time has come for President Assad to step aside.”
We are concerned, however, that unless urgent actions are taken by the United States and its
allies, the Assad regime’s use of force against the Syrian people will only increase and the
already significant death toll will mount.
As you have stated previously, the Arab Spring presents an opportunity to “pursue the world as it
should be” rather than continuing to “accept the world as it is.” There is perhaps no place where
this is truer than Syria.
The regime of Bashar al-Assad and that of his father which preceded him, have brutally
repressed the Syrian people for decades, imprisoning, torturing, and killing those who attempted
dissent. In recent years, Syria has formed increasingly close ties with Iran, jointly supporting
terrorist groups with funds and weaponry used to terrorize American allies in the region. For
years, the Assad regime pursued a covert nuclear program with North Korean assistance, which
could have led to a disastrous cascade of nuclear proliferation in the Middle East. Finally, by
facilitating foreign fighters’ transit through Syrian territory, the Assad regime contributed to the
death and injury of thousands of American troops serving in Iraq over the last eight years.
The tactics used by the current regime make clear now more than ever that a post-Assad Syria is
in America’s interest. We commend you for adding your uniquely powerful voice to the chorus
of foreign leaders in calling for Assad’s departure. We appreciate the executive order issued
today that freezes Syrian government assets in the U.S.’s jurisdiction and prohibits new
investment in Syria by U.S. persons or the exportation or sale of any services to Syria by U.S.
persons. We commend you for freezing imports of Syrian petroleum products and prohibiting
U.S. persons from transacting business related to Syrian-origin petroleum products. The actions
send a strong message of support to the Syrian people in their quest for freedom.
We believe there is more than can be done. Specifically, we urge you to:
 Work with our European allies to tighten the sanctions regime against Syria. Particular
attention should be paid to potential multilateral energy sector sanctions as well as the
passage of energy sanctions bills recently introduced in the House of Representatives and
Senate.
 Encourage Germany, Italy, and France, which are the main buyers of Syrian oil, to
terminate their purchases of Syrian crude; forcefully urge energy trading firms from
Switzerland, Holland, and elsewhere to stop their sales of refined petroleum products to
Syria; and pressure European, Russian, Chinese, and Indian companies to freeze their
investments in Syria’s energy sector and the transfer of any energy-related technology,
goods, and services.
 Sanction any person assisting Syria in the development of energy pipelines as well as
insurance firms, shipping companies, financing entities, ports managers, and other
persons active in supporting Syria’s energy sector.
 Implement measures against Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps individuals and
entities doing business in Syria. Expand sanctions against Syrian persons who are
involved in human rights abuses, support for terrorism, and supporting Syria’s
proliferation activities. Sanction those international companies doing business with these
designated Iranian and Syrian individuals and entities.
 Sanction the Syrian Central Bank in order to freeze the Assad regime out of the global
financial system and inhibit the ability of the regime to settle oil sales and other financial
transactions. It is important to ensure that the Central Bank of Syria does not facilitate
trade for any sanctioned Syrian banks, businesses and persons.
 Work with our European allies to follow your lead in sanctioning the Commercial Bank
of Syria and the Syrian Lebanese Commercial Bank.
 Sanction international persons involved in the purchase, issuance, financing or the
facilitation of Syrian sovereign debt, including energy bonds, which the Assad regime
may use to circumvent investment-related sanctions in order to raise capital for its energy
sector.
 Engage Syrian opposition figures outside the country and ensure that all available aid and
assistance, including secure communications and Internet circumvention technology is
being made available to these groups.
 Leverage the International Atomic Energy Agency’s referral of Syria to the United
Nations Security Council for its violation of its nonproliferation obligations to press for
additional sanctions against Damascus.
 Recall Ambassador Robert Ford from Damascus unless he is clearly charged with aiding
the transition to democracy in Syria.
Mr. President, the opportunity presented by recent developments in Syria and the broader region
is momentous. As you said in May, “we cannot hesitate to stand squarely on the side of those
who are reaching for their rights, knowing that their success will bring about a world that is more
peaceful, more stable, and more just.” Supporting Syrians to rid themselves of Assad’s yoke
would also have broader game-changing implications on peace and stability in the Middle East.
It would deny Iran the use of its major ally as a proxy for terrorism, stem the flow of Syrian arms
to Hezbollah, reduce instability in Lebanon, and lessen tensions on Israel’s northern border.
This is a significant moment where many of our allies and partners in Europe and the region are
in agreement that the Assad atrocities must stop now. They are poised to act. Now is the time to
continue placing the United States firmly on the side of the Syrian people. We urge you to grasp
this opportunity and increase your administration’s efforts to ensure that the brave people taking
to the streets in Syria are soon able to enjoy the fruits of freedom that we in the West hold so
dear.
Sincerely,
Khairi Abaza, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Ammar Abdulhamid, pro-democracy Syrian activist
Hussain Abdul-Hussain, Kalimah Institute
Fouad Ajami, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Amr Al-Azm, Member, Executive Committee, Antalia Committee and Professor, Shawnee State
University
Tony Badran, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Bassam Bitar, Former Diplomat in the Syrian Embassy (Paris)
Max Boot, Council on Foreign Relations
Toby Dershowitz, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Michael Doran, Brookings Institution
Mark Dubowitz, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Michael Makovsky, Bipartisan Policy Center
John Hannah, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
William Inboden, University of Texas-Austin
Frederick W. Kagan, American Enterprise Institute
Robert Kagan, Brookings Institution
William Kristol, The Weekly Standard
Robert J. Lieber, Georgetown University
Tod Lindberg, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Jamie Fly, Foreign Policy Initiative
Reuel Marc Gerecht, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Bashar Lutfi, Northwest Medical Center
Clifford D. May, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Honorable Robert C. McFarlane, Former National Security Advisor
Jonathan Schanzer, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Randy Scheunemann
Gary Schmitt, American Enterprise Institute
Lee Smith, Foundation for Defense of Democracies and The Weekly Standard
Henry Sokolski, Nonproliferation Policy Education Center
Kenneth R. Weinstein, Hudson Institute
Ambassador R. James Woolsey, Former Director of Central Intelligence, Chairman of the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Robert Zarate, Foreign Policy Initiative
*Organizations provided for affiliation only.