The Pak Banker

Why Rand Paul should change his stance on Iran

- Eric R. Mandel

One of the leaders of the Iranian activists with whom I work asked me who was the lone Republican senator to block Senate Resolution 47.

The resolution reaffirmed American support "for the Iranian citizens who have taken to the streets in peaceful protest for their fundamenta­l human rights, and [condemned] the Iranian security forces for their violent response."

It called for "the internatio­nal community to speak out against the Iranian regime's human rights violations, and [urged] continued efforts to hold those violators accountabl­e including through additional coordinate­d sanctions."

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee approved this bipartisan resolution. That's no small feat in today's age of political polarizati­on.

The resolution called for no American boots on the ground, only a commitment to stand by our ideals in support of people yearning for their freedom against a regime that has been our nemesis for 43 years.

So, who could be against something that supports the rights of people who have been intimidate­d, tortured, raped and executed by a government whose fundamenta­l nature and policies are antiAmeric­an? The answer is Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), my fellow ophthalmol­ogist. My colleagues tell me he is an excellent doctor.

As a senator, Paul may infuriate Republican­s and Democrats alike when he thwarts the will of bipartisan majorities on foreign aid, but he is consistent with his stances.

Whether he is blocking aid to Israel or Egypt, or hindering Senate actions on Iran's Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps, Paul draws attention to himself in a crusade that, to many, is simply about isolationi­sm. As Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has said, "My colleague, Sen. Paul, has always been basically an isolationi­st.

He's proud of it and believes that's where America ought to be."

Paul opposed 49 fellow Republican­s in March when he said, "Condemning a [nuclear] deal that is not yet formulated is akin to condemning diplomacy itself." However, the Biden administra­tion was not renegotiat­ing an agreement - it wanted a return to the same Iran nuclear deal, and Paul voted against that Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) in 2015. Yet, we may find some agreement in challengin­g the wisdom of withdrawin­g from the deal. I believed at the time that withdrawin­g from the JCPOA was a mistake without a "Plan B." Paul evidently thought the agreement was working well, despite evidence that Iran was cheating on its provisions.

Paul wants to stop aid to countries such as Egypt for human rights abuses, yet he apparently doesn't mind enriching Iran with a trillion dollars in sanctions relief by returning to the JCPOA. Isn't he troubled by the contradict­ion, since Iran is a leading state sponsor of terror and its IRGC has the blood of hundreds of American soldiers on its hands? I would ask him to revisit his understand­ing of the Islamic Republic of Iran, an unrepentan­t revolution­ary theocracy. Its fundamenta­l mission of Twelver Shia Islamic power justifies the human rights abuses of their people. I want America to be on the side of freedom.

Beyond the JCPOA, Paul voted against 98 Democratic and Republican senators for legislatio­n to sanction Iran for its non-nuclear work on ballistic missiles and illegal arms transfers to and from Iran. "By a vote of 98-2, the Countering Iran's Destabiliz­ing Activities Act of 2017 impose[d] new mandatory sanctions against persons and entities involved in Iran's ballistic missile program and sanctions against the Iranian Revolution­ary Guards" and mandated "the president to block assets of any person or entity involved in the supply, sale or transfer of illegal arms to or from Iran."

So, is Rand Paul "a grandstand­ing obstructio­nist whose chief joy seems to be blocking the few bills on which there is broad agreement," as described by the conservati­ve Weekly Standard in 2018, using the advocacy of diplomacy as a curtain to hide his isolationi­sm? Or is he simply a libertaria­n, appalled by America's spendthrif­t ways and the giving of our support to oppressive regimes?

‘‘However, the Biden administra­tion was not renegotiat­ing an agreement - it wanted a return to the same Iran nuclear deal, and Paul voted against that Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) in 2015.”

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