Reactions from the Arab world and the US began to pour in Tuesday after President Donald Trump announced that he plans to lift sanctions on Syria, a significant win for the country’s new government after the fall of the Assad regime last year.
Meanwhile, social media videos showed jubilant crowds in the streets. In Homs, people were seen wielding Syrian and Saudi Arabian flags as the crowd chanted: “Hail Saudi Arabia, hail Saudi Arabia! Hail Salman, hail Salman!” in apparent reference to the Saudi king.
Here’s what leaders and officials around the world are saying:
Syria’s Ministry of Foreign and Expatriate Affairs described the move in a post on X as “a radical U-turn to the people of Syria as we strive to get through a long, painful chapter of war,” calling it “an active opportunity for Syria to strive toward stability and self-sustainability.”
Syria’s economy and trade minister, Mohammad Nidal al-Shaar, shed tears live on air with Saudi outlet Al Arabiya, as he underscored that Syria is “now entering a new phase.”
The Qatari Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun expressed similar sentiments in social media posts, with each conveying an “appreciation” for the announcement.
The UN’s special envoy for Syria, Geir Pedersen, also welcomed the announcement, saying the lifting of sanctions is imperative to allow the delivery of essential services.
Stateside, the top senators on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee — Republican Jim Risch and Democrat Jeanne Shaheen — had encouraged the move before Trump’s trip. Shaheen said in a statement Tuesday she is “encouraged by the President’s announcement to move expeditiously and am in touch with the State Department and NSC to make sure this long-awaited window of opportunity does not close for Syria.”
Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, a close Trump ally, offered a more reserved response, saying, “I am very inclined to support sanctions relief for Syria under the right conditions. However, we must remember that the current leadership in Syria achieved its position through force of arms, not through the will of its people.”
CORRECTION: This story has been corrected to reflect that crowds celebrating the US lifting of sanctions against Syria were cheering the Saudi king.