Syria Sanctions Update (2026)
From Comprehensive Embargo to Targeted Compliance
An Outlook for Foreign Investors
1. Executive snapshot (what changed, and when)
European Union
- EU “sectoral / economic” sanctions were largely lifted on May 28, 2025, with exceptions retained on security grounds.
- EU guidance (updated Nov 2025) states that most sectoral restrictions were lifted, notably affecting banking/finance, energy, transport, and certain import/export restrictions, while other security-related restrictions remain.
United States
- The US no longer maintains a comprehensive Syria sanctions program; the June 30, 2025 Executive Order revoked the core Syria sanctions EOs effective July 1, 2025.
- The US explicitly kept sanctions targeting specific bad actors (e.g., Assad network, human rights abusers, Captagon traffickers, proliferation links, ISIS/Al-Qaeda affiliates, Iran/proxies).
- Export controls still matter: BIS guidance indicates that EAR controls and end-use/end-user restrictions continue, with expanded licensing pathways (e.g., “Syria Peace and Prosperity” / SPP for EAR99) but screening remains essential.
Canada
- Canada had issued a general permit (Feb 28, 2025) to temporarily ease some restrictions (extended Aug 2025; set to expire Feb 23, 2026).
- On Feb 18, 2026, Canada amended its Syria sanctions regulations, easing restrictions on import/export, investment, and financial/other services, and removed 24 entities and 1 individual to reduce barriers to economic activity (while adding new listing criteria and listing six individuals).
2. What sanctions still “bite” in practice (common residual risk across US/EU/Canada)
Even after the broad economic rollbacks, foreign companies still face meaningful constraints in these buckets:
- Designations / asset freezes on specific persons & entities
- US: SDN and other authorities remain relevant (terrorism, human rights, narcotics, proliferation, etc.).
- EU: targeted listings remain, even as sectoral measures were lifted.
- Canada: ongoing ability to list (incl. new criteria) and targeted listings continue.
- Security-related trade controls (especially EU)
- EU measures that commonly remain referenced include arms embargo, dual-use export restrictions, surveillance/cyber tools controls, and cultural heritage restrictions.
- US export controls and end-use/end-user rules
- Even with relaxed pathways, EAR rules, restricted end users, and prohibited end uses (WMD, military/intelligence, etc.) remain the gating issue for many technology and industrial items.
3. When to expect release” by sector (realistic outlook for investors)
Because most broad economic sanctions have already been lifted/rolled back (EU May 2025; US July 2025; Canada materially eased Feb 2026), the question becomes:
- Which sectors are investable now with standard controls, vs.
- Which sectors remain constrained indefinitely (or require case-by-case licensing and enhanced diligence)?
♦ Sector readiness map – (practical investor view)
Generally investable now (standard compliance, screening, and contracting)
These sectors are typically compatible with the current policy direction, provided counterparties and end uses are clean:
- Food, FMCG, general trading, retail
- Healthcare delivery & pharma distribution (non-controlled equipment)
- Construction (civil works), building materials (non-dual-use)
- Hospitality, services, education, professional services
- General logistics (non-sanctioned counterparties; non-controlled goods)
Rationale: EU lifted most sectoral restrictions including banking/finance, energy, transport frameworks; Canada eased broad prohibitions; US ended comprehensive program—so the gating factor is now mainly counterparty screening + export controls rather than blanket bans.
Investable now, but “enhanced diligence / structuring required”
These are feasible, but you should assume banking friction, export-classification work, and robust contracting:
- Banking/fintech and payments (practical onboarding and correspondent risk still a hurdle even where legally permissible)
- Telecom / IT / software (watch surveillance/cyber export restrictions in EU; US EAR classification)
- Industrial equipment, manufacturing lines (export classification and end-use controls)
- Aviation / airports / airlines / spare parts (often export-control heavy)
- Energy services & downstream distribution (more feasible than upstream; still sensitive)
Supporting context: EU’s lift covers banking/finance, energy, transport broadly, but security-related trade controls (dual-use, surveillance) remain. US export controls remain a separate track from sanctions.
High constraint / likely slow or case-by-case indefinitely
Expect licensing, heightened scrutiny, or outright prohibitions depending on jurisdiction, item, and counterparties:
- Defense, weapons, military procurement
- Dual-use tech and controlled electronics (sensors, certain comms, encryption in some contexts, advanced manufacturing)
- Surveillance / interception / spyware / certain cyber Tools
- Anything involving designated parties (Assad network, terrorism-linked entities, Captagon trafficking, WMD/proliferation, ISIS/Al-Qaeda affiliates, Iran/proxies)
This is explicitly aligned with what the US says remains sanctioned post-rollback and what the EU describes as “security-grounds” exceptions.
4. What can we expect as “timing” going forward
What is predictable
- EU and US have already executed the major step-change (May/July 2025).
- Canada has just executed a major easing step (Feb 18, 2026).
What is not predictable
Further “release” will mostly be about:
- Delisting (removing remaining designated persons/entities),
- Relaxing export controls and sensitive-goods rules,
- Reducing compliance friction in international banking.
Those moves are politically contingent and typically reversible (EU has used “gradual / reversible” language around monitoring in prior legal texts).
Possible upcoming scenarios:
- Base case (next 6–18 months): continued easing in practical channels (banking comfort, trade finance) for non-sensitive sectors; selective delisting.
- Upside case: broader delisting and clearer banking corridors; faster normalization for telecom/industrial imports.
- Downside case: re-tightening or “snapback” risk if security/human-rights triggers escalate (more likely via targeted listings than full sector bans).