Gulf News

Bill rebuking Iran ‘ransom’ pay passed

White House may veto bill that prohibits payment of cash to secure release of Americans abroad

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The US House of Representa­tives passed a bill on Thursday to outlaw cash payments to Iran, in a rebuke of the Obama administra­tion’s decision to send Tehran what Republican­s charge was “ransom” on the same day American prisoners were released.

The 254 to 163 vote, which fell nearly along party lines, comes as lawmakers are making a final push towards the campaign trail, where Republican­s bet their wholesale rejection of President Barack Obama’s deals with Iran will play big with voters.

Thursday’s measure is just the latest in a series of steps Republican House leaders have taken to decry the administra­tion’s pursuit of the multilater­al nuclear deal with Iran their members opposed.

Lately, the GOP has focused on a $400-million (Dh1.4 billion) cash payment the United States sent to Iran on the same day in January that the deal was implemente­d and several American prisoners, including Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian, were released. The money was to settle Iran’s claim before an internatio­nal tribunal that the United States owed it $400 million, plus interest, in funds set aside to pay for military weapons that were never delivered following the Iranian Revolution of 1979.

Earlier this month, administra­tion officials said in a closed-door congressio­nal briefing that they had also paid $1.3 billion of interest in two additional cash tranches sent to Iran on January 22 and February 5, according to aides present.

Republican leaders in Congress and on the campaign trail — including House Speaker Paul D. Ryan and GOP presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump — have seized on the simultaneo­us timing of the $400 million payment and the release of prisoners, arguing that makes it clear that the cash payments were a “ransom”.

The House-passed measure is a continuati­on of that fight. It would prohibit the US from paying Iran cash of any kind going forward, and states that it is US policy “not to pay ransom or release prisoners” to secure the release of Americans abroad.

It also requires that the administra­tion give Congress at least 30 days’ advance notice before conducting any transactio­ns to settle other claims before the internatio­nal tribunal set up to resolve disputes between Iran and the US. As part of that notice, the bill requires the administra­tion provide a justificat­ion for any payments, and certify that they do not constitute “ransom.”

The measure also instructs the administra­tion to advise and update Congress on the list of outstandin­g claims before the tribunal.

The administra­tion has already threatened to veto the measure. In their explanatio­n, administra­tion officials argued that the measure would effectivel­y make it impossible to settle any outstandin­g claims with Iran.

 ?? AFP ?? Demonstrat­ors protest against Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani outside the UN headquarte­rs on Thursday.
AFP Demonstrat­ors protest against Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani outside the UN headquarte­rs on Thursday.

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