New York Post

Damned With Faint Praise

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To hear the Democrats in Congress who supported President Obama’s Iran nuclear deal — and then successful­ly filibuster­ed it in the Senate, refusing even to allow an actual vote — you’d think someone was literally holding a gun to their heads.

Because it’s hard to find a single one who argues that Obamaand Secretary of State John Kerry negotiated anything close to a good deal.

Which is pretty significan­t — given that the president himself long insisted, “No deal is better than a bad deal.”

But that was then. Now, his foreignpol­icy legacy — as he sees it — is on the line.

Still, the list of Democratic supporters’ objections is astonishin­g. (Imagine what they’d be saying if they were voting “no.”)

Like House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer: “This agreement is not one I would have negotiated, nor one I think should have been agreed to . . . I believe this agreement gives too much to Iran and demands too little in return.”

Or New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker: “Unfortunat­ely, it’s clear we . . . have only delayed — not blocked — Iran’s potential nuclear breakout.

“This deal has clear flaws and substantia­l risks even beyond the obvious and disturbing short duration of its term,” Booker added. “We are legitimizi­ng a vast and expanding nuclear program in Iran. We are, in effect, rewarding years of deception, deceit and wanton disregard for internatio­nal law.”

Or Chris Coons, who holds Vice President Joe Biden’s old Senate seat: “This is not the agreement I hoped for ... I have deep concerns about the scope and implicatio­ns of Iran’s permitted centrifuge­developmen­t program after 10 years and its nuclearenr­ichment capacity after 15 years.”

Moreover, the Delaware pol added, “Opponents decry . . . the exclusion of humanright­s issues and Iranian support for terrorism. I share their frustratio­n.”

Or Connecticu­t’s Chris Murphy: “This deal has many unsavory elements.”

Then there’s Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who says he decided to support the deal only because former Vice President Dick Cheney is against it.

OK, there are a few enthusiast­ic supporters: House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi calls it “a diplomatic masterpiec­e.”

Then again, Pelosi probably thinks Congress has to pass it to learn what’s in it.

But the prize surely goes to tonedeaf Rep. Pat Murphy of Florida, who claimed the deal means “peace in our time” — the very words Neville Chamberlai­n used for his infamous Munich pact with Adolf Hitler.

President Obamapromi­sed he wouldn’t negotiate a bad deal. But his own supporters have made it painfully clear that that’s precisely what he did.

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