The Jerusalem Post

Democrats must stop politicizi­ng Iran deal

- • By IRIT TRATT The American Spectator, The Algemeiner, and Israel Hayom.

In a party-line vote on Thursday, Democrats on the House Foreign Affairs Committee (HFAC) marked up and then voted down a Republican-led resolution that would require the Biden administra­tion to release the pending text of the draft Iran Nuclear Deal for congressio­nal review. The resolution, whose lead sponsor is Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-North Carolina), compels greater transparen­cy of the Biden administra­tion’s negotiatio­ns involving the Iran nuclear deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and strengthen­s a statute already in place as part of the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015.

The provision stipulates that the president “keep the appropriat­e congressio­nal committees and leadership fully and currently informed of any initiative or negotiatio­ns with Iran relating to Iran’s nuclear program, including any new or amended agreement.” Under US law, a 30-day congressio­nal review period is required before implementi­ng any deal regarding lifting sanctions. Given that nuclear talks are currently paused, the HFAC’s decision to vote against congressio­nal oversight ensures that details surroundin­g an agreement will not reach the House floor before the November elections.

The vote on the GOP measure arrived the same week as US envoy for Iran, Robert Malley, briefed a bipartisan group from the HFAC on the status of the nuclear talks. While continuing to escalate its nuclear weapons program, Iran has stated that it would not agree to a deal that includes the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) probe into its contested nuclear sites.

The Wall Street Journal reported that in the quarter leading up to August 21, “Iran’s cache of highly enriched uranium of 60% purity increased by

about 30%,” with the UN now claiming that Iran has enough uranium to produce a nuclear weapon.

While the US State Department has suggested that Iran’s response to the final draft of the agreement “is not constructi­ve,” spokesman Ned Price reaffirmed a commitment to reviving the agreement in a September 13 press briefing declaring that, “it is not too late to conclude a deal.”

Malley’s appearance before lawmakers indicates that the US may withdraw its demand for Iran to agree to the IAEA investigat­ion and that it may be inching toward inking a deal. The administra­tion’s open-ended timeline for restoring the

JCPOA, coupled with its willingnes­s to loosen constraint­s limiting Iran’s nuclear ambitions, should be enough to spur bipartisan congressio­nal action.

CONFIRMING HER disappoint­ment with the House Foreign Affairs Committee’s failure to endorse the resolution, Foxx warned that “if this deal is inked without Congress exercising its explicit oversight authoritie­s in reviewing it, the administra­tion would be sending an irresponsi­ble message to the entire internatio­nal community – especially to our longstandi­ng ally, Israel. Good governance and effective oversight must not become relics of a bygone era.”

Citing concerns last month

over the $100b. Iran will receive under the current agreement, Prime Minister Yair Lapid directed his frustratio­n at US President Joe Biden, effectivel­y blaming his administra­tion for not “fulfilling his commitment to stop Iran from developing a nuclear weapon if it joins the Iran deal as it stands.” Moreover, Iran will be able to keep the uranium that it has secretly procured, with restrictio­ns on research and developmen­t on advanced centrifuge­s expiring in two years.

While policymake­rs, like Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez, are sounding the alarm over the impending deal, most Democrats will likely refuse

to buck Biden regarding the administra­tion’s overtures toward Iran. In recent weeks, over two dozen House Democrats signed a bipartisan letter to Biden noting their concern over reported inclusions in the deal. Yet, at least one Democratic staffer who spoke to the Jewish Insider believes that some Democrats who signed the letter would ultimately back the new Iran agreement if and when it comes before Congress.

Democratic congressme­n Jim Costa of California and Henry Cuellar of Texas are among those who signed onto the correspond­ence, yet voted in favor of the 2015 agreement. Reflecting the sentiment expressed to the Jewish Insider is Thursday’s

House Foreign Affairs Committee decision, which witnessed Democrats who in the past have intimated “concern” about negotiatin­g with Iran, choosing instead to reject congressio­nal action. Merely calling for the Biden administra­tion to strike a stronger deal with the Islamic state is moot if not bolstered by exerting some legislativ­e muscle.

It bears mentioning that the US is not directly negotiatin­g with Iran and relies on European intermedia­ries to relay details. Even worse, Russia and China are assisting the EU as nuclear brokers, with Russia set to receive a “reported $10b. contract to help build atomic reactors in Iran.”

Condemning Russian aggression in Ukraine while granting it the latitude to arrange a nuclear deal legitimize­s Russia’s geopolitic­al standing and reveals a misguided US foreign policy. Unlike the Senate, the minority party in the House of Representa­tives retains little power.

FOR NOW, House Democrats can successful­ly stonewall legislativ­e steps by refusing to introduce measures like Thursday’s resolution onto the House floor. In the interim, Biden will afford Iran time to continue its malignant activities while recognizin­g the sensibilit­y behind deemphasiz­ing movements toward sealing a deal prior to the midterm elections.

For its part, the Islamic state is increasing its global terrorist stronghold. In recent months, Iran has sentenced two LGBTQ+ activists to death and plotted to assassinat­e US government officials. It has unleashed its terrorist proxies in the region and attacked targets in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Last month, three US soldiers were injured following an Iranian-backed rocket attack in Syria.

Weeks after the Iran-sponsored Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad unleashed a barrage of rockets on Israeli cities, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi promised to destroy Israel should the Jewish state strike Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Mustering perfunctor­y statements of unease over Iranian intransige­nce, and voting to restrict Congress’s role concerning a deal that has profound strategic implicatio­ns, underscore­s today’s climate of political polarizati­on. House Democrats must set aside protecting their party leader and start to honestly confront the challenges outlined in the Iran nuclear agreement.

The writer resides in New York. Her work has also appeared in

 ?? (Andrew Harnik/Reuters) ?? US REPRESENTA­TIVE Virginia Foxx: If the Iran nuclear deal ‘is inked without Congress exercising its explicit oversight authoritie­s in reviewing it, the administra­tion would be sending an irresponsi­ble message to the entire internatio­nal community – especially to our longstandi­ng ally, Israel,’ she argues.
(Andrew Harnik/Reuters) US REPRESENTA­TIVE Virginia Foxx: If the Iran nuclear deal ‘is inked without Congress exercising its explicit oversight authoritie­s in reviewing it, the administra­tion would be sending an irresponsi­ble message to the entire internatio­nal community – especially to our longstandi­ng ally, Israel,’ she argues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel