The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Iran deal is just like health care

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In a report to Congress last week, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson grudgingly certified that the Iran nuclear deal that candidate Donald Trump denounced as “the worst deal ever negotiated” is in fact working as designed, and that Iran is fully honoring all of its commitment­s.

Given the challenges that we face with North Korea, that ought to have been welcome news. But of course it is not.

Immediatel­y after submitting his report that the deal is working fine, Tillerson called a press conference to denounce it as a failure. He also announced that the United States is reviewing its participat­ion in the seven-nation agreement, warning that “Iran’s nuclear ambitions are a grave risk to internatio­nal peace and security.”

“The (Iran deal) fails to achieve the objective of a non-nuclear Iran; it only delays their goal of becoming a nuclear state,” Tillerson said. “This deal represents the same failed approach of the past that brought us to the current imminent threat we face from North Korea. The Trump administra­tion has no intention of passing the buck to a future administra­tion on Iran.”

The crux of Tillerson’s objection is that the deal does not permanentl­y guarantee that Iran will never seek nuclear weapons, and he’s right. It does not, and in fact cannot. Because it focuses solely on nuclear issues, it also allows Iran to continue to be a significan­t — but non-nuclear — pain in America’s butt, so to speak, frustratin­g U.S. policy in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Lebanon and Israel.

But here’s what Tillerson didn’t say: If we want to guarantee that Iran never seeks nuclear weapons and that it becomes more pro-American in its foreign policy, then our options are slim. We have to go to war, topple their government, install a client ruler and then occupy a nation of 80 million angry people for decades. If there is any other way of accomplish­ing those goals, the Trump administra­tion has not yet articulate­d them.

And if that situation is beginning to seem familiar, it should. What we have here is, for lack of a better term, The Obamacare Conundrum in a foreign-policy environmen­t.

The Obamacare Conundrum has three basic steps:

Step One: You spend years attacking a policy as completely unacceptab­le, to the point that you have invested your entire credibilit­y in its dismantlin­g.

Step Two: However, when finally given the chance to undo the policy in question, you find yourself unable to propose a better alternativ­e. Of all the options available, the one you hated turns out to be the least objectiona­ble.

Step Three: Unable to reverse the policy, but also unwilling to accept its continuanc­e, you then engage in a less-than-subtle effort to undermine it. You do so even though Step Two remains valid: You have no idea how to handle the fallout should your sabotage effort succeed.

In this specific iteration of The Obamacare Conundrum, Tillerson already admits that Iran is honoring all of its obligation­s. If we break the deal, the United States, not Iran, will get the blame internatio­nally. We, not Iran, will be the rogue nation, and the notion that other countries will then work with us on some even better deal is fantasy.

And if we break the deal with Iran, after it surrendere­d 98 percent of its low-enriched uranium and all of its medium-enriched uranium, and after it rendered its heavy-water reactor unusable for weapons work, what possible motivation would North Korea have to negotiate the peaceful surrender of its own nuclear program?

 ??  ?? My Opinion Jay Bookman
My Opinion Jay Bookman

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