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Why The (Toothless) Iran Sanctions Bill Matters
Townhall.com ^ | February 16, 2015 | Daniel Pipes

Posted on 02/16/2015 11:49:13 AM PST by Kaslin

Nearly all the 54 Republican U.S. senators will vote in favor of the Kirk-Menendez bill requiring sanctions on Iran if the P5+1 negotiations fail. President Obama has promised to veto it. Now, the senate is gearing up for a high-drama vote; will Democrats provide the 13 to 15 votes needed for a veto-proof majority?

Lost in the shuffle is a little-noticed section of the bill that, if passed, guts it. The "Draft of Nuclear Weapon Free Iran Act of 2015," posted on the website of Sen. Mark Kirk (Republican of Illinois) contains a "Waiver of Sanctions." Designed to win the support of skittish Democrats, it also undermines the bill's goal of forcing Obama's hand in the negotiations. Section 208 bears quotation in full:

The President may waive the application of any sanction pursuant to a provision of or amendment made by this title for a 30-day period, and may renew the waiver for additional 30-day periods, if the President, before the waiver or renewal, as the case may be –

(1) certifies to the appropriate congressional committees that – (A) the waiver or renewal, as the case may be, is in the national security interest of the United States; (B) the waiver or renewal, as the case may be, is necessary to and likely to result in achieving a long-term comprehensive solution with Iran; and (C) Iran is not making further progress on its nuclear weapons program and is in compliance with all interim agreements with respect to that program; and

(2) submits to the appropriate congressional committees a comprehensive report on the status of the negotiations toward a long-term comprehensive solution that includes an assessment of the likelihood of reaching that solution and the time frame anticipated for achieving that solution.

What's the point, one might ask, of the pro-sanctions side struggling so hard to attain a veto-proof majority when Obama can negate its provisions at will? Indeed, he has already made statements along the very lines the bill requires, notably in his State of the Union (SOTU) address in January, when he (falsely) claimed that "for the first time in a decade, we've halted the progress of its nuclear program and reduced its stockpile of nuclear material." On the other side, why does the White House expend so much political capital stopping this bill when it could let it pass and then kill it by invoking the waiver?

Why the major combat over what amounts to a symbolic resolution?

In part, it increasingly embarrasses Obama by making him unceasingly justify the waver every 30 days. But also, as he glancingly explained in the SOTU, he passionately wants Kirk-Menendez defeated because "new sanctions passed by this Congress, at this moment in time, will all but guarantee that diplomacy fails … [by] ensuring that Iran starts up its nuclear program again."

In other words, the Iranian pseudo-parliament (the Majlis) is warning that the bill's passage – even if its sanctions are subsequently waived – in itself cancels the existing interim accord and ends the negotiating process. Iran's foreign minister also declared that the Majlis would retaliate against any new U.S. sanctions legislation by ramping up the nuclear program; and that new sanctions would damage the West's favorite Iranian politician, President Hassan Rouhani.

With this clever tactic, the Iranians have provoked a grand test of wills in Washington, turning Obama into their enforcer obliged to tame Congress; Majlis speaker Ali Larijani has warned that "If Obama can't solve his problems [with Congress], he himself will be responsible for the disruption of the negotiations." Rather than tell Tehran to take a hike, the administration (in keeping with its larger strategy) fell for this ruse, resulting in a forthcoming Senate battle royal.

Of course, cajoling Tehran to the negotiating table ignores how the much Iranians benefited from the last accord, signed in November 2013, and how they expect to do as well in the next one. It also ignores that, to provide diplomatic cover as their approximately 10,000 centrifuges busily whirl away, they seek ad nauseam negotiations.

Is this not reminiscent of the bazaar, where the wily merchant charmingly cheats the naïve tourist? The stake, however, is not the price of a Persian carpet but an apocalyptic rogue regime acquiring and perhaps deploying nuclear weapons.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Israel; Syria; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: iran; iraq; israel; kurdistan; syria; waronterror

1 posted on 02/16/2015 11:49:13 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Am I reading this correctly? The author is stating that the appearance of victory over Obama is more important than sanctions on Iran? What's next? Passing Keystone with a provision that Obama can stop it being built? A border security bill that says at the President's option it's okay to let anyone cross the border?

How useless can the DC crowd be? They keep reaching new lows.

2 posted on 02/16/2015 12:00:37 PM PST by grania
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To: grania

Then the only thing to do would be to try and impeach the maninfant. A conviction will probably fail, too; however, at least with a trial one can air all of Obama’s illegal actions out in public.


3 posted on 02/16/2015 12:57:10 PM PST by Stepan12 (Our present appeasement of Islam is the Stockholm Syndrome on steroids.)
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To: Stepan12
The thing to do would be for the Republicans to articulate their principles in such a way as to compel dems in vulnerable districts to vote with them. Stop it with the games and compromises.

For heavens sake, they won, and won big. The reason for that was not to compromise. It was to stand up to Obama.

Impeachment? No, it would just rally Obama's troops. Much better if the elitist power hungry RINOs realized the enemy is Obama and stood with constitutional conservatives.

4 posted on 02/16/2015 1:13:14 PM PST by grania
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To: grania
Congress can't give him any war authority. He is obviously conflictged when opposing Muslims. He can only really conduct war against the great satan and the zionist entity. Cut his funding so he can't make war. I don't want our boys to be killed for nothing.
5 posted on 02/16/2015 3:04:43 PM PST by Stepan12 (Our present appeasement of Islam is the Stockholm Syndrome on steroids.)
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To: Stepan12
The thing is, Obama had the authority to disintegrate ISIS last summer when they were marching in a column across the desert. By looking for authority for "boots on the ground" which he would misuse, it seems he's trying to disown that horrific blunder.

As long as Saudi Arabia is our ally and Obama's still doing the regime change thing against governments that thwart terrorism and protect Christians and other minorities, any authority given to Obama will lead nowhere good.

6 posted on 02/16/2015 3:22:47 PM PST by grania
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