Texarkana Gazette

Iran framework: Devilish details to follow

- Cal Thomas TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

Too bad the “framework” of a nuclear weapons deal with Iran didn’t come four days earlier on April Fools’ Day. It would have been more appropriat­e.

The United States is being asked to foolishly believe promises by a regime that is religiousl­y motivated to eliminate Israel and ultimately the United States, is the premier sponsor of terrorism in the world, has a record of breaking promises, including past promises about nuclear weapons, and still holds American prisoners, including a Christian minister, a Washington Post reporter, a former Marine and Robert Levinson, a retired DEA agent taken hostage in 2007.

Did Secretary of State John Kerry demand they be released as part of the framework? We don’t know because the deal that isn’t yet a deal has not been formalized and if an agreement is actually reached by the next deadline in June, we still might only know what they tell us, unless Congress holds hearings and asks the right questions. Shades of Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s line about the need to pass Obamacare to find out what’s in it.

The other half of the credibilit­y gap is President Obama. We are asked to believe a man who said, “If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor” and that his would be the most “open and transparen­t” administra­tion in history, among many other obfuscatio­ns.

In a dispute between an American president and a foreign leader, especially an Iranian leader, one might expect most Americans to side with the president. Not in this case. Iran’s chief negotiator at the talks in Switzerlan­d, Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, accused the Obama administra­tion of misleading the American people and Congress. Zarif claimed that in spite of statements from Secretary Kerry and a “fact sheet” released by the American delegation, the U.S. is making claims that conditions were reached for the accord that Iran did not agree to.

If the two sides can’t agree on the contents of the framework, how are they supposed to reach a final agreement by June? In this case, the devil is not in the details; the devil is Iran.

Iran has always maintained it is seeking nuclear power for peaceful purposes. If that were true, there would be no need for negotiatio­ns. How do you negotiate with someone who has lied from the start and is told in the Koran that lying to “infidels” is permissibl­e in pursuit of Islamic goals?

Did Secretary Kerry ask Zarif if he had heard from Allah lately and whether Allah has changed his mind about the destructio­n of Israel, the eradicatio­n of the Jewish people and the eliminatio­n of the United States? I’m guessing probably not, but he should have since current and previous Iranian leaders have said openly this is the mandate they have received from their god.

Among the many concerns in the announced framework is language that says, “The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will have regular access to all of Iran’s nuclear facilities, including Iran’s enrichment facility at Natanz and its former enrichment facility at Fordow, and including the use of the most up-to-date, modern monitoring technologi­es.” What is meant by “regular access”? Will it have to be scheduled, or will there be surprise visits? Iran, like North Korea, has hidden nuclear material from inspectors in the past and if they wanted to they might do so again.

A Wall Street Journal editorial noted: “Consider the Additional Protocol, a 1997 addendum to the Nuclear NonProlife­ration Treaty that was meant to expand the IAEA’s ability to detect and monitor clandestin­e nuclear activities. Iran signed the Additional Protocol in December 2003. … The signature meant nothing: By September 2005 the IAEA reported that Iran wasn’t meeting its commitment­s, and Iran abandoned its pretense of compliance by February 2006.”

Stockbroke­rs are required to say that past performanc­e is no guarantee of future results. With Iran, past performanc­e IS such a guarantee.

Delaying an inevitable military confrontat­ion, rather than early interventi­on, allows the enemy to grow stronger with more loss of life and property when war comes. That is history’s lesson.

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