Arab Times

US lawmakers still take aim at N-deal

‘Measures necessary to send Tehran a message’

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WASHINGTON, July 12, (RTRS): US lawmakers this week will consider three Republican-backed measures targeting the Obama administra­tion’s nuclear agreement with Iran, which bitterly divides Washington a year after it was announced and could play a role in November’s elections.

One bill would impose new sanctions on Iran over any sponsorshi­p of terrorism or human rights violations. Another would bar the purchase from Iran of “heavy water,” a nonradioac­tive byproduct from making nuclear weapons and nuclear energy. The third would block Iran’s access to the US financial system, including the use of the dollar.

Republican lawmakers, who control the House of Representa­tives and Senate and unanimousl­y opposed the nuclear deal announced last July 14, have said the measures are necessary to send Iran a strong message that it will face consequenc­es if it violates internatio­nal agreements.

Many, joined by several Democrats, have been especially concerned by Iran’s actions since the deal was officially implemente­d in January, including its test-firing of ballistic missiles in March.

“It makes sense to do all we can to check this very dangerous Iranian activity,” Republican Representa­tive Ed Royce, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told the Rules Committee, which sets up rules for debate of bills headed to the House floor.

Thanks in part to the nuclear agreement, Iran has begun to rejoin global politics and economics after more than three decades of isolation. Business and political leaders are visiting the country, which is also hosting trade conference­s.

In his first report on the deal, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Iran’s ballistic missile launches “are not consistent with the constructi­ve spirit” of the nuclear deal. He said it was up to the UN Security Council to decide if the launches violated the resolution backing the agreement.

However, he also said he was “encouraged by Iran’s implementa­tion of its nuclear commitment­s.”

Republican­s worry that US President Barack Obama is so eager to preserve the pact as a legacy that his administra­tion will give Tehran too much leeway before he leaves office in January.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee, backs the nuclear deal. Republican candidate Donald Trump has promised to tear it up if he is elected on Nov 8.

Most of Obama’s fellow Democrats in Congress backed the agreement. They say the new legislatio­n is intended to undermine or even derail it.

The White House issued a threat on Monday to veto all three bills, saying they would affect the continued viability of the nuclear agreement.

The deal “is critical to ensuring that Iran’s nuclear program is and will remain exclusivel­y peaceful, which is profoundly in the national security interest of the United States and the internatio­nal community,” it said in a statement.

The bills are not expected to win enough votes to advance in the Senate, even if they pass the House. And if they did pass the Senate, they would lack enough support to override a veto.

Backers of the Iran deal said Republican­s were trying to appeal to voters just days before the convention where Trump is due

to become the party’s presidenti­al nominee.

Polls show an overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans have an unfavorabl­e view of Iran.

Dylan Williams, vice president for government affairs at J Street, a pro-Israel group that supported the nuclear deal, said such legislatio­n plays into voters’ frustratio­n with what they see as a do-nothing Congress.

“This kind of grandstand­ing not only endangers our security by endangerin­g the deal, it’s exactly the type of politics that people are sick of,” he said.

 ??  ?? This US Navy photo released July 11, shows the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75), as it transits the Atlantic Ocean on July 10. Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group is currently on an
8-month combat deployment in support of maritime...
This US Navy photo released July 11, shows the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75), as it transits the Atlantic Ocean on July 10. Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group is currently on an 8-month combat deployment in support of maritime...

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