The Freeman

Trump speech to vilify Iran over nuke deal, non-nuke issues

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump plans to deliver a broad and harsh critique of Iran in a speech yesterday declaring that the landmark Iran nuclear deal is not in America's national security interests, according to U.S. officials and outside advisers to the administra­tion.

Trump's speech from the White House will outline specific faults he finds in the 2015 accord but will also focus on an array of Iran's troubling non-nuclear activities, four officials and advisers said. Those include Tehran's ballistic missile program, support for Syrian President Bashar Assad, Lebanon's Hezbollah movement and other groups that destabiliz­e the region.

Under U.S. law, Trump faces a Sunday deadline to notify Congress whether Iran is complying with the accord that was painstakin­gly negotiated over 18 months by the Obama administra­tion and determine if it remains a national security priority. Although Trump intends to say Iran is living up to the letter of the agreement, he will make the case that the deal is fatally flawed and that its non-nuclear behavior violates the spirit of the regional stability it was intended to encourage, the officials and advisers said.

The officials and advisers, who insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly preview the speech, said Trump will not call for a re-imposition of nuclear sanctions on Tehran. He will urge lawmakers to codify tough new requiremen­ts for Tehran to continue to benefit from the sanctions relief that it won in exchange for curbing its atomic program. And he'll announce his long-anticipate­d intent to impose sanctions on Iran's Revolution­ary Guard Corps by designatin­g it a terrorist organizati­on under an existing executive order, according to the officials and advisers.

In addition, Trump will ask Congress to amend or replace outright the legislatio­n that currently requires him to certify Iranian compliance every 90 days. Officials have said that Trump hates the requiremen­t more than the nuclear deal itself because it forces him to take a position every three months on what he has denounced as the worst deal in American history. That frequency has also irritated aides who have complained that they are spending inordinate amounts of time on certificat­ion at the expense of other issues.

At the White House, Trump's chief of staff, John Kelly, confirmed the president would announce the results of his Iran policy review on Friday but declined to offer any detail. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was calling foreign minister colleagues from the other parties to the deal to brief them on what to expect, the State Department said.

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