by Erez Linn and News Agencies
Senate Foreign Affairs Committee chair and ranking Democrat urge the administration not to enable a Security Council vote on Iran deal this week • Presidential hopeful Rubio: We treat the ayatollah in Tehran with more respect than Israel's prime minister.
Senators Bob Corker (left)
and Robert Menendez
|
Photo credit: AP |
Members of the U.S. Congress, representing
both parties, are taking measures to prevent a United Nations Security
Council vote, scheduled for Monday, on the recently signed nuclear
agreement between Iran and six world powers.
Under the terms of the deal, most of the
sanctions currently imposed on Iran will be lifted by the end of the
year. The Security Council is expected to approve the deal.
Republican Senator Bob Corker, the chairman of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and the ranking Democrat on the
committee, Sen. Robert Menendez, sent an urgent letter to U.S.
President Barack Obama last week reminding him that under the Iran
Nuclear Agreement Review Act, "a bill which 98 Senators and 400
Representatives supported, and you [Obama] signed," the president cannot
begin lifting American sanctions for a period of at least 30 days from
the day the agreement was signed in order to allow Congress time to
review and vote on the agreement.
"We are deeply concerned that your
administration plans to enable the United Nations Security Council to
vote on the agreement before the United States Congress can do the
same," they wrote.
In their view, the United Nations vote
violates Obama's pledge to allow "the American people and Congress to
get a full opportunity to review this deal."
The House Committees on Foreign Affairs and on
Homeland Security issued a similar letter last week. Minority
(Democratic) Whip Steny Hoyer has remarked that he felt Obama should
hold off implementing the agreement.
The Security Council is expected to approve
the agreement on Monday, ensuring that the sanctions are gradually
lifted over the course of the coming years in exchange for Iranian
cooperation with the international community. The Security Council's
vote will apply only to the sanctions imposed by the U.N. since 2007 and
not to sanctions imposed by the American administration or Congress. In
practice, however, it will signal to international companies that they
can begin seeking commercial ties with Iran.
In the Obama administration's view there is no
legal reason not to allow both -- the Congress review and the U.N. vote
-- to happen simultaneously, since the agreement itself will only begin
being implemented 90 days after it was signed.
In an effort to deflect criticism, White House
deputy press secretary Eric Schultz said Thursday that the
administration would not begin lifting American sanctions until after
Congress had reviewed the agreement.
Meanwhile, in an opinion piece titled "Why I'm
troubled by the Iran nuclear deal" on a U.S. news portal, Menendez
wrote that the White House was deceiving the American public.
"Those who dare ask uncomfortable, but
necessary questions are labeled warmongers or party infidels. This
approach is intellectually dishonest, robbing the public of the
judicious debate this topic requires," he wrote.
According to Menendez, the White House changed
its tune midway. "Today, the White House commitment that 'no deal is
better than a bad deal' has morphed to this 'best bad deal' is better
than no deal," he wrote.
To Republican presidential candidates, rolling back the agreement would be a top priority if they were to win the White House.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker says he would
"terminate the bad deal with Iran on day one" and work to persuade
allies to reinstate economic sanctions lifted under the deal. Former
Texas Gov. Rick Perry concurred, saying one of his first actions in
office would be to "invalidate the president's Iran agreement."
Jeb Bush, the former governor of Florida, said
that while he would consult with allies about the deal on his first day
in office, he was inclined to "move toward the abrogation of it." He
added that he would not do it on "day one" and accused other candidates
who declared that they would of misleading their voters.
Florida Sen. Marco Rubio told The Associated
Press he would withdraw from a deal even if allies objected. "We now
live in a world were we treat the ayatollah in Tehran with more respect
than the prime minister of the only pro-American, free enterprise
democracy in the Middle East, the State of Israel," the Florida senator
said Saturday.
The next president has no legal obligation to
implement the nuclear agreement, which is a political document, not a
binding treaty.
But if there's no sign Iran is cheating, it's unlikely
the European allies, who spent nearly two years negotiating alongside
the U.S., would be compelled to walk away and reinstate sanctions. And
it's nearly impossible to imagine Russia and China, which partnered with
the U.S., Britain, France and Germany in the talks, following a
Republican president's lead.
Erez Linn and News Agencies
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=26979
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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