Top senator says new Iran sanctions will have to wait
Top senator says new Iran sanctions will have to wait | The Times of Israel.
( Fathomless nonsense. Iran needs no “excuse.” It will back out and blame the other side the minute it suits them. – JW )
Word of delay comes after Kerry warns lawmakers that applying ‘gratuitous’ pressure could give Tehran an excuse to back out of Geneva deal
Secretary of State John Kerry testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013, before the House Foreign Affairs Committee. (photo credit: AP/J. Scott Applewhite)WASHINGTON — The head of the US Senate’s Banking Committee said Tuesday he is leaning toward delaying any new legislation on Iranian sanctions, hours after Secretary of State John Kerry pressed Congress to hold off on passing new penalties.
Senator Tim Johnson, a Democrat from South Dakota, said Kerry and US President Barack Obama had convinced him to put off new sanctions against Iran, pending an interim deal that curbs enrichment activity in return for eased sanctions.
“The president and Secretary Kerry have made a strong case for a pause in Congressional action on new Iran sanctions, so I am inclined to support their request and hold off on committee action for now,” Johnson said in a statement.
“We’ll see. Not this year,” he added to The Hill.
The Banking Committee, which oversees international finance agreements, would play an important role in creating and passing new sanctions legislation.
Johnson’s statement came hours after Kerry took a brief break from his rigorous travel schedule to the Middle East to pressure Congress to delay additional sanctions against Iran, describing such legislation as “gratuitous” and potentially damaging not only to any future deal with the Islamic Republic, but also to America’s relations with fellow states in the P5+1 group.
The administration and Tehran both see new sanctions as potential deal-breakers that could undermine the recently signed pact between Iran and six world powers.
Two senators at the head of a drive for new sanctions, Mark Kirk (R-IL) and Robert Menendez (D-NJ), are reportedly pursuing language that would legislate new penalties, but give the White House the option of deferring on them, according to The Washington Post, citing a Senate aide. In recent weeks, the administration has strongly indicated that such legislation is not welcome – with or without the added provision.
Speaking to the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Kerry said Congress needed to tread carefully or risk unraveling diplomatic progress made in Geneva.
“Let me be very clear: This is a very delicate diplomatic moment and we have a chance to address peacefully one of the most pressing national security concerns that the world faces today,” Kerry told the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “We’re at a crossroads. We’re at one of those really hinge points in history. One path could lead to an enduring resolution in the international community’s concerns about Iran’s nuclear program. The other path could lead to continued hostility and potentially to conflict.”
Kerry’s comments shed light on Washington’s flexibility on the terms of a final-status agreement. While he said that the interim agreement reached last month in Geneva rendered the Arak heavy water facility “frozen stone-cold,” he did not rule out the possibility of future negotiations over the fate of the plant, which could be used to produce plutonium for a nuclear bomb.
The secretary of state also avoided any commitment to the effect that the final agreement would prohibit Iran entirely from enriching its own uranium.
Kerry assured Congress that during the interim period, while the P5+1 member states are negotiating a final agreement, “Iran’s nuclear programs will not move forward.” Instead, he promised, “this agreement halts the progress of Iran’s nuclear program and rolls its back in certain places.”
In response to a question by Rep. Eliot Engel (D-NY), Kerry said that the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia had welcomed the deal because it provided new-found security. He acknowledged, however, that Israel did not find the deal reassuring.
Anticipating being pressed by members of Congress on the repeal of sanctions placed on Iran by Congressional mandate, Kerry told the committee that the estimated $7 billion in sanctions relief that would result from Iran’s compliance with the interim agreement “pales in comparison with the amount of pressure we’re leaving in place.”
Describing additional sanctions as “gratuitous,” Kerry emphasized that he would not rule out such legislation in the future.
The interim deal with Iran prohibits the Obama administration from introducing new sanctions for six months. Kerry and other US officials have warned of dire consequences if Washington breaks its word. And Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, has said any new package of commercial restrictions would kill the deal.
“If Congress adopts sanctions, it shows lack of seriousness and lack of a desire to achieve a resolution on the part of the United States,” Zarif told Time magazine.
“I’m just saying ‘not right now.’ This is a very delicate diplomatic moment,” Kerry explained on Tuesday, arguing that were Congress to finalize additional sanctions, it could result in the Iranians pulling out of talks, or disunity among fellow members of the P5+1 negotiating team.
“I don’t want to give the Iranians a public excuse to flout the agreement,” Kerry said. “It could lead our international partners to think that we’re not an honest broker, and that we didn’t mean it when we said that sanctions were not an end in and of themselves but a tool to pressure the Iranians into a diplomatic solution. Well, we’re in that. And six months will fly by so fast, my friends, that before you know it, we’re either going to know which end of this we’re at or not.”
Members of both parties challenged Kerry. Engel, the top Democrat on the panel, specifically asked Kerry why the administration was so strongly opposing sanctions that wouldn’t be imposed unless Iran breaks the agreement. And Democratic Rep. Brad Sherman expressed misgivings about trusting the Obama administration, which he accused of hampering all sanctions efforts against Iran thus far.
As Kerry spoke, reports circulated that the secretary of state will address Iran sanctions before the full Senate on Thursday in an intensified effort to keep the upper house from voting on a sanctions bill before it goes on its winter recess.
Members of Congress generally believe that crippling petroleum, banking and trade sanctions levied on Iran in recent years were responsible for bringing its more moderate president, Hassan Rouhani, to power and his representatives to the negotiating table. Many argue more pressure, not less, could break Iran’s will and secure better terms in a final agreement.
At several points, Kerry and lawmakers talked over each other as they argued about whether the deal recognized Iran’s “right” to enrich uranium — which the administration rejects — and about the details of international inspections on Iranian sites and its non-nuclear weapons programs.
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., was perhaps strongest in her criticism of the administration, flatly denouncing the agreement in Geneva as a “bad deal.”
“We may have bargained away our fundamental position,” said Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., the committee chairman. “Iran should not be enriching and reprocessing,” he said, criticizing what he termed the administration’s “false confidence that we can effectively check Iran’s misuse of these key nuclear bomb-making technologies.”
Iran insists its program is solely for peaceful nuclear energy and medical research.
Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.
Explore posts in the same categories: Uncategorized

December 11, 2013 at 5:04 PM
I was reading yesterday how back under Reagan, both Houses of Congress passes sanctions against South Africa by veto proof majorities over the president’s objections.
And of course Reagan was right – those sanctions were passed in favor of a terrorist / communist / racist organization that has since turned South Africa into a hellhole. One that most of the world is now “celebrating” all month long.
Clearly no such environment exists today on the other side of the aisle. The left will follow their radical-in-chief like lemmings right off the cliff. Every last one of them voted for Obamascam and they surely won’t defy him on Iranscam either!
December 11, 2013 at 5:31 PM
Absolutely correct Mark. The truth you just dared to speak would send the mainstream media running and hiding. May I add, that If a majority of Israelis were ‘black’, the situation Israel finds itself in today would take on an entirely different color (no pun intended).
Oh yeah, don’t forget the burning tire ‘necklaces’. The horror speaks for itself.
December 11, 2013 at 8:21 PM
Luckily, not all media are participating in the sanctification of Mandela.
The National Interest: The Mandela Myth
http://nationalinterest.org/commentary/the-mandela-myth-9528
December 12, 2013 at 1:26 AM
It’s been reported that the number of heads of state attending the funeral of this terrorist is the most in history. Over 90, surpassing the record of 70 for Pope John Paul II in 2005.
Just incredible how morally bankrupt the world has become in the short amount of time I’ve been on this earth!
December 12, 2013 at 1:27 AM
And I’m thankful for Netanyahu for not attending, even though he joined the bandwagon to say positive things about this sworn enemy of Israel.
December 12, 2013 at 1:41 AM
I look forward to the day 89-year-old Robert Mugabe kicks the can.
He received the biggest applause at the funeral which is no surprise considering how similar he has ruled compared to his next door neighbor.
Will 90 heads of state attend his funeral as well?