Santa Fe New Mexican

Don’t forget Assad’s butchery despite world of distractio­ns

- Josh Rogin is a columnist for the Global Opinions section of The Washington Post.

When Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke to the assembled leaders of the Arab League last week, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, newly restored to the organizati­on, took off his translatio­n headset and refused to listen. Assad’s mere presence in the hall shows the Arab League is deaf to Ukraine’s pleas. Arab leaders have thrown in their lot with the Syrian butcher and his close ally, Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Assad’s diplomatic “normalizat­ion” in the Arab world has been building for a while. Still, the images from the Arab League summit in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, were disturbing. Twelve years ago, the Syrian dictator was expelled from the league for brutally attacking his own people. Now, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has welcomed him back with kisses. In a speech, the Saudi host said it was time to “turn the page of the past,” adding: “We hope that this contribute­s to supporting Syria’s stability, resuming Syria’s normal role in the Arab world.”

Assad promised to cooperate with Arab nations on drug traffickin­g, brazenly using his own control over the massive captagon drug trade as a bargaining chip. In exchange, the Arab states promised billions in aid to Syria, mostly to be funneled through Assad’s corrupt coffers.

Zelenskyy appealed to the Arab leaders’ sense of morality. He argued they should resist Russian influence and stand up for the principles of sovereignt­y and national independen­ce. He tried to evoke sympathy for the Tatar Muslims in Crimea, who have faced persecutio­n since Russia occupied the peninsula in 2014. He asked the league to stand against war crimes.

“I’m sure we can all be united in saving people from the cages of Russian prisons,” Zelenskyy told the assembled Arab leaders. “Unfortunat­ely, there are some in the world and here among you who turn a blind eye to those cages and illegal annexation­s.”

To many, Zelenskyy’s invitation to Jiddah seemed like a cynical attempt to distract from Assad’s return. But it ended up having the reverse effect by exposing Arab states’ false “neutrality” on the Russia-Ukraine war. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, for example, have refused to condemn Putin’s invasion and have instead used their economic power to bolster oil prices, underminin­g Western sanctions. Now, by praising Assad, Russia’s partner in war crimes, the Arab League was implicitly rejecting Zelenskyy’s appeals.

The Biden administra­tion publicly says it won’t normalize relations with Assad but no longer objects to Arab countries doing so. This is an abdication of 12 years of U.S. commitment­s to hold Assad accountabl­e for his mass atrocities. It is also a failure to implement U.S. law requiring sanctions on those who aid the Syrian dictator.

In 2019, Congress passed a law, known as the Caesar Act, that aimed to pressure Assad to stop his campaign of mass torture and mass murder of innocent people. But both the Trump and Biden administra­tions barely implemente­d it. Now, Congress is trying to pressure the U.S. government into action.

This month, the House Foreign Affairs Committee unanimousl­y approved the Assad Anti-Normalizat­ion Act, sending it to the House floor. The bill has 30 co-sponsors who span the political landscape, including top Democrats such as Rep. Adam B. Schiff of California and top Republican­s such as committee chairman Michael McCaul of Texas. If passed into law, it would shore up the Caesar Act by extending it until 2032 and closing several loopholes.

Among other things, the new bill would require the administra­tion to determine if Assad’s purported “charities” are diverting humanitari­an aid for the regime and singles out the group Syria Trust for Developmen­t, which is connected to first lady Asma al-Assad. The legislatio­n would also require the administra­tion to investigat­e and report on any financial transactio­ns in Assad-controlled areas coming from any country in the Middle East. (It’s no wonder several of these government­s have been lobbying against the bill.)

The Biden administra­tion’s willingnes­s to condone Arab acceptance of Assad has provoked other prominent critics outside of Congress. The Assad Anti-Normalizat­ion Act has been endorsed by former U.S. national security officials from both parties, including former House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Eliot L. Engel and former national security adviser H.R. McMaster.

“The United States should continue to isolate the war criminal Assad and his murderous regime,” McMaster said when endorsing the bill. “Assad and his Russian and Iranian sponsors want wealthy countries to underwrite the reconstruc­tion of the cities they reduced to rubble.”

It’s true sanctions can have unintended consequenc­es for civilians, which is why the legislatio­n carves out exceptions for genuine humanitari­an aid. Critics will also argue sanctions on Assad haven’t worked so far. But that’s only because the Caesar Act has never been properly used.

Exerting pressure on those funding Assad might be the only remaining way to deter them from helping Assad rebuild until he releases the thousands who are being tortured in his dungeons and stops the slaughter of those Syrians living outside of his forces’ control.

By turning a blind eye to Assad’s war crimes, members of the Arab League have made clear they don’t care about Putin’s war crimes either. But unless somebody does something to hold Assad and his enablers accountabl­e, their Syrian and Ukrainian victims won’t be the last.

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