The Day

Following the Iran charade on Capitol Hill

- CHARLES KRAUTHAMME­R

Congress is finally having its say on the Iran deal. It will be an elaborate charade, however, because, having first gone to the United Nations, President Obama has largely drained congressio­nal action of relevance.

At the Security Council, he pushed through a resolution ratifying the deal, thus officially committing the United States as a nation to its implementa­tion— in advance of any congressio­nal action.

The resolution abolishes the entire legal framework, built over a decade, underlying the internatio­nal sanctions against Iran. A few months from now, they will be gone.

The script is already written: The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, relying on Iran’s self-inspection (!) of its most sensitive nuclear facility, will declare Iran in compliance.

The agreement then goes into effect, and Iran’s nuclear program is officially deemed peaceful.

Sanctions are lifted. The mullahs receive $100 billion of frozen assets as a signing bonus. Iran begins reaping the economic bonanza, tripling its oil exports and welcoming a stampede of foreign companies back into the country.

It is all precooked. Last month, Britain’s foreign secretary traveled to Tehran with an impressive delegation of British companies ready to deal. He was late, however. The Italian and French foreign ministers had already been there, accompanie­d by their own hungry businessme­n and oil companies. Iran is back in business.

As a matter of constituti­onal decency, the president should have submitted the deal to Congress first. And submitted it as a treaty. Which it obviously is. No internatio­nal agreement in a generation matches this one in strategic significan­ce and geopolitic­al gravity.

Obama did not submit it as a treaty because he knew he could never get the constituti­onally required votes for ratificati­on. He’s not close to getting two-thirds of the Senate. He’s not close to getting a simple majority. Nowonder: In the latest Pew Research Center poll, the American people oppose the deal by a staggering 28-point margin.

To get around the Constituti­on, Obama negotiated a swindle that requires him to garner a mere one-third of one house of Congress. Indeed, on Thursday, with just 42 Senate supporters— remember, a treaty requires 67— the Democrats filibuster­ed and prevented, at least for now, the Senate from voting on the deal at all.

But Obama two months ago enshrined the deal as internatio­nal lawat the U.N. Why should we care about the congressio­nal vote? In order to highlight the illegitima­cy of Obama’s constituti­onal runaround and thus make it easier for a future president to overturn the deal, especially if Iran is found to be cheating.

As of now, however, it is done. Iran will be both unleashed— sanctions lifted, economy booming, with no treaty provisions regarding its growing regional aggression and support for terrorists— and welcomed as a good internatio­nal citizen possessing a peaceful nuclear program. An astonishin­g trick.

Iran’s legitimati­on will not have to wait a decade, after which, as the Iranian foreign minister boasts, the U.N. file on the Iranian nuclear program will be closed, all restrictio­ns will be dropped and, as Obama himself has admitted, the breakout time to an Iranian bomb will become essentiall­y zero. On the contrary. The legitimati­on happens now. Early next year, Iran will be officially recognized as a peaceful nuclear nation.

This is a revolution in Iran’s internatio­nal standing, yet its consequenc­es have been largely overlooked. The deal goes beyond merely leaving Iran’s nuclear infrastruc­ture intact. Because the deal legitimize­s that nuclear program as peaceful (unless proven otherwise— don’t hold your breath), it is entitled to internatio­nal assistance. Hence the astonishin­g provision buried in Annex III, Section 10, committing Western experts to offering the Iranian program our nuclear expertise.

Specifical­ly “training courses and workshops.” On what? Among other things, on how to protect against “sabotage.”

Imagine: We are now to protect Iran against, say, the very Stuxnet virus, developed by the NSA and Israel’s Unit 8200, that for years disrupted and delayed an Iranian bomb

Secretary of State John Kerry has darkly warned Israel to not even think about a military strike on the nuclear facilities of a regime whose leader said just Wednesday that Israel will be wiped out within 25 years. The Israelis are now being told additional­ly— Annex III, Section 10— that if they attempt just a defensive, nonmilitar­y cyberattac­k (a Stuxnet II), the West will help Iran foil it.

Ask those 42 senators if they even knowabout this provision. And how they can sign on to such a deal without shame and revulsion.

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