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An e-newsletter delivering updates and analysis on current issues about Israel and the Middle East conflict

March 26, 2014

Congress Sends Letter Showing Increasing Distrust of Obama on Iran Negotiations

Dear Friend of FLAME:

Three few weeks ago, Israel seized a freighter in the Red Sea that was carrying deadly, Syrian-manufactured, high-trajectory missiles sent by Iran on their way to Gaza.  While this capture by Israel exposes yet another example of Iran's aggressive exporting of terrorism, it seems to have made little impact on the White House.

The President scarcely acknowledged the seizure and continues to pursue nuclear disarmament negotiations with Iran as though nothing had happened and the Islamic Republic is a respectable, peace-seeking partner.

Thankfully, the US Congress sees Iran for what it is---one of the most dangerous nations on earth, a state that imminently threatens the entire world both with international terror activities and its headlong development of nuclear weapons capability.

At the end of 2013, a bi-partisan group of 59 US Senators sponsored the Iran Nuclear Free Weapons Act, which would increase sanctions on Iran following the six-month expiration of the so-called "Interim Agreement" negotiated by the P5+1 group of nations, including the US. Though Mr. Obama has said he supports stiffer sanctions if Iran fails to come to a more substantive agreement, he has promised to veto the Nuclear Weapons Free Iran Act if the Senate passes it.  That bill is still alive, but its sponsors have postponed a vote until they can secure a veto-proof majority.

Nonetheless, the Congress is clearly not happy with the President's stance or with progress on negotiations with Iran, and its members are not resting.  Just last week, super-majorities of 83 Senators and 395 Representatives signed letters insisting that only Congress has the authority to lift sanctions on Iran and that strict, thorough nuclear dismantling provisions be part of any deal.

This week's FLAME Hotline article, written by fearless Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin, characterizes this movement by Congress as another sign of America's growing disillusionment with the Obama administration's foreign policy.  

Please review and pass this short, powerful article to your friends and colleagues. Help us inform U.S. citizens about the danger of Mr. Obama's obstinacy on increased sanctions against Iran if it fails to decommission its centrifuges, nuclear reactors and heavy-water nuclear processing facilities.  Above all, urge your contacts to encourage Congress to quickly pass the Nuclear Weapons Free Iran Act.

Thanks for your support of FLAME and of Israel!

Best regards,

Jim Sinkinson
Vice President, Facts and Logic About the Middle East (FLAME)

P.S.

FLAME has been spreading the truth about Iran’s apocalyptic danger to the U.S., Israel and the entire world for many years now. To keep the pressure on, we recently created and are currently publishing a hasbarah (public relations) message---"Iran, Nuclear Weapons and the "Interim Agreement": Is this the time to relax or rather increase economic sanctions on the Islamic Republic?"---in media reaching 10 million readers.  We have also sent it to every U.S. Congress member and President Obama. I hope you'll review this powerful piece and pass it on to all your contacts who will benefit from its message. If you agree that FLAME's bold brand of public relations on Israel's behalf is critical, I urge you to support our publication of such outspoken messages. Please consider giving donation now, as you're able---with $500, $250, $100, or even $18. (Remember, your donation to FLAME is tax deductible.) To donate online, just go to http://www.factsandlogic.org/make_a_donation.html. Now more than ever we need your help to ensure that Israel gets the support it needs---from the U.S. Congress, from President Obama, and from the American people.

Congress nearly unanimous in its dismay over Obama's Iran policy

By Jennifer Rubin, Washington Post ("Right Turn"), March 19, 2014

Significant majorities in the House and Senate do not trust the president when it comes to Iran. That is the major take away from two letters, one signed by 83 senators and one by 395 House members. The House letter goes into greater detail on verification of any deal while the Senate is more specific about the requirements needed to disable Iran's illicit nuclear weapons program. The gist of the letters, however, is the same: Congress will in essence need to approve any final deal because legislative action is needed to lift sanctions; a final deal must disable Iran's capacity to build a nuclear weapon; and stringent verification must be agreed to.

The House letter adds: "Finally, although the P5+1 process is focused on Iran's nuclear program, we remain deeply concerned by Iran's state sponsorship of terrorism, its horrendous human rights record, its efforts to destabilize its neighbors, its pursuit of intercontinental ballistic missiles, and its threats against our ally, Israel, as well as the fates of American citizens detained by Iran. We want to work with you to address these concerns as part of a broader strategy of dealing with Iran."

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Ranking Member Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) chose to write his own statement, telling the president: "Recent press reports indicate that as nuclear negotiations resume in Vienna, Iranian oil exports may be on-track to exceed the terms of the interim deal and other nations are beginning to explore longer-term economic relationships with Iran. These developments undermine the international consensus to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. While I support the negotiations over Iran's nuclear weapons program, Congress should consider clear consequences for Iran should they violate the Joint Plan of Action and move to ensure the president cannot grant sanctions relief as part of any final deal without congressional approval."

The House and Senate letters are the lowest common denominator that allow all but the most partisan Democrats room to go on record for a strong pro-sanctions policy. As such they do not mention use of force, and they do not take the place of legislation. They nevertheless are as close as Congress ever comes to consensus on a significant issue: Congress won't lift sanctions for a phony deal and/or while Iran stalls for time.

There are several takeaways from all of this.

First, the letters and their timing suggest a fundamental lack of faith in the administration to put pressure on Iran sufficient to give up its nuclear ambitions. Members fear the White House will strike a half-hearted deal that merely provides cover for Iran to continue its nuclear weapons program, just as we did with regard to North Korea. Corker's statement highlights the extreme discomfort with the interim deal that is already destroying the international consensus on sanctions.

In the statement by Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) accompanying the House letter, we see an unmistakable vote of no confidence in the president: "Many members, including myself, have strong reservations about the conduct of nuclear diplomacy to this point, and are concerned about the lack of a broader strategy to confront Iran's growing threats to regional stability. For negotiations on Iran's nuclear program to be successful, they must be rooted in such a broader strategy. As this letter makes clear, we ignore the nature of the regime in Tehran, and its many threats to international peace and security, at our own peril."The disastrous turn of events in Ukraine suggests the president's "trust me"plea will fall on deaf ears when it comes to Iran, where skepticism was already rampant on Capitol Hill.

Second, this is not, as the White House and its spinners would like to claim, a partisan matter. In the Senate, 41 of the 83 signatories were Democrats. The White House, having jammed up sanctions, now faces a bipartisan revolt if it does not reach a deal in July or if it reaches a deal that does not accomplish the aims Congress has set out. Moreover, once negotiations have hit a dead end, Congress will begin calls for a more credible threat of military force and an affirmation of support for Israel, should it be forced to act.

Third, if one ever needed evidence that Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) is the odd man out on foreign policy in his party and in the country at large, this is it. He did not sign the Senate letter nor did he sign onto the most recent sanctions legislation; he's made clear previously he wants to give Obama room to negotiate. That is Hillary Clinton's position, as well as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's. It is not "Reaganesque"any more than is his interest in a containment strategy. Reagan's Cold War philosophy was: "We win, they lose."Rand Paul's philosophy seems to be: Obama's got it handled. That puts him in sync with not a single 2016 GOP contender. On the most important national security issue of our time, he's got it exactly wrong on the president and the mullahs.

As we noted, the debacle in Ukraine is not likely to increase confidence in the president's stewardship of foreign policy. More important, it will be seen by Iran, Russia and Syria as one more bit of evidence that the president can be pushed around and/or lured into deals that sacrifice American interests. Congressional letters are a poor substitute for a credible commander in chief. Nevertheless, at this point these letters and the Israeli army are the main impediments to a nuclear-capable Iran.

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