Posted tagged ‘Tom Cotton’

Associated Press says Tom Cotton was right!

August 16, 2015

Associated Press says Tom Cotton was right! Power LineJohn Hinderaker, August 16, 2015

[W]ith majorities in both houses of Congress opposed to the deal, the Associated Press tells us it can still proceed as an executive agreement. Of course it can. And the next president, who will probably be a Republican, can revoke it; and this Congress, or a subsequent one, can pass legislation inconsistent with it. That’s what happens when you don’t have the votes to ratify a treaty.

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This Associated Press story, headlined “Obama can do Iran nuclear deal even if Congress disapproves,” is getting a lot of attention:

The September vote on the Iran nuclear deal is billed as a titanic standoff between President Barack Obama and Congress. Yet even if U.S. lawmakers reject the agreement, it’s not game-over for the White House.

A congressional vote of disapproval would not prevent Obama from acting on his own to start putting the accord in place. …

Obama doesn’t need a congressional OK to give Iran most of the billions of dollars in relief from economic sanctions that it would get under the agreement, as long as Tehran honors its commitments to curb its nuclear program.

“A resolution to disapprove the Iran agreement may have substantial political reverberations, but limited practical impact,” says Robert Satloff of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “It would not override President Obama’s authority to enter into the agreement.”

That is correct. The president has the constitutional authority to enter into an executive agreement. Which is where debate over the Iran deal began, with an open letter to Iran’s leaders that was signed by 47 Republican senators and posted on Senator Tom Cotton’s web site. The letter explained that the Iran agreement was not being submitted to the Senate for ratification as a treaty. Therefore, as a mere executive agreement, it could be canceled with a stroke of the pen by America’s next president:

First, under our Constitution, while the president negotiates international agreements, Congress plays the significant role of ratifying them. In the case of a treaty, the Senate must ratify it by a two-thirds vote. A so-called congressional-executive agreement requires a majority vote in both the House and the Senate (which, because of procedural rules, effectively means a three-fifths vote in the Senate). Anything not approved by Congress is a mere executive agreement. …

What these two constitutional provisions mean is that we will consider any agreement regarding your nuclear-weapons program that is not approved by the Congress as nothing more than an executive agreement between President Obama and Ayatollah Khamenei. The next president could revoke such an executive agreement with the stroke of a pen and future Congresses could modify the terms of the agreement at any time.

Tom Cotton’s letter was viciously attacked by liberals, but what it said was obviously correct. Now, with majorities in both houses of Congress opposed to the deal, the Associated Press tells us it can still proceed as an executive agreement. Of course it can. And the next president, who will probably be a Republican, can revoke it; and this Congress, or a subsequent one, can pass legislation inconsistent with it. That’s what happens when you don’t have the votes to ratify a treaty.

Secret Iran Deals Cover Military Site, Other Past Arms Work

July 23, 2015

Secret Iran Deals Cover Military Site, Other Past Arms Work

Lawmakers demand congressional access to two IAEA accords

BY:
July 23, 2015 5:00 am

via Secret Iran Deals Cover Military Site, Other Past Arms Work | Washington Free Beacon.

The Iran nuclear agreement includes two secret side deals covering a key Iranian military site and other past arms activities, according to two lawmakers who are demanding that Congress be granted access to the documents.

The secret agreements were reached between Iran and the International Atomic Energy (IAEA) on Tehran’s past nuclear arms work and are a central component of the Vienna accord reached by Iran, the United States, and five other states.

A key part of the nuclear agreement requires Iran to disclose all military nuclear arms work before international sanctions are lifted. The IAEA has until December to report on the past military activities.

Rep. Mike Pompeo, (R., Kan.), a member of the House Permanent Select Committee, said in an interview he first learned of the secret side deals by questioning IAEA officials.

Pompeo, who first revealed the agreements along with Sen. Tom Cotton, (R., Ark.), said there may be additional secret pacts the Obama administration has not disclosed to Congress as required by legislation covering congressional review of the Iran nuclear agreement.

The agreements deal with access to Iran’s military facility at Parchin, a military site that was excluded from the public text of the Vienna agreement reached July 14. A second secret accord outlines how past nuclear arms work by Iran will be addressed.

“It’s outrageous,” said Pompeo of the secret agreements, noting that other members of the six-nation agreement may already have been briefed on the side deals.

“We have asked for information from the intelligence community and the State Department about these agreements,” Pompeo said.

At the State Department Wednesday, spokesman John Kirby disputed the lawmakers claims and said “Congress has what we have.” The side agreements in question are “IAEA documents” that are not part of the formal agreement, the spokesman told reporters.

“There’s no side deals. There’s no secret deals between Iran and the IAEA that the P5- plus-1 has not been briefed on in detail,” Kirby said.

Kirby called the IAEA accords “technical arrangements” that are standard practice by the agency. The documents will not be released publicly or to other states.

“But our experts are familiar and comfortable with the contents, which we would be happy to discuss with Congress in a classified setting,” Kirby said.

The issue was expected to be raised during closed-door briefings on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, Kirby said.

Rep. Robert Pittenger, a member of the House Financial Services Committee and vice chairman of the panel’s Task Force to Investigate Terrorism Financing, voiced concerns about the Iran deal after a closed-door meeting with Secretary of State John Kerry, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, and Treasury Secretary Jack Lew.
“Nothing they talked about gave me confidence the administration has adequately addressed the issue of inspections or sanctions relief [for Iran],” Pittenger (R-N.C.) told the Free Beacon.
Iran has been receiving $700 million a month for the past several months and will get a windfall of over $100 billion in frozen funds as part of the deal, he said, while at the same time Tehran continues to support terrorism and backs Syria.
“A zebra’s stripes don’t change,” he said. “This administration is under the erroneous assumption that Iran will be different today than it was from yesterday.”

Congress has been provided with copies of all materials related to what is dubbed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, including annexes and a verification assessment, he said.

White House National Security Adviser Susan Rice echoed Kirby’s comments that all Iran deal documents were given to Congress.

“These [IAEA-Iran] documents are not public, but nonetheless, we have been briefed on those documents, we know their contents, we’re satisfied with them and we will share the contents of those briefings in full in a classified session with the Congress,” Rice said. “So there’s nothing in that regard that we know that they won’t know.”

Pompeo said the administration may be seeking to provide Iran with a face-saving measure after Iran publicly announced all its military facilities would be off-limits to international nuclear inspectors.

“It may well be that this was an attempt to give political cover for Iranian negotiators, but in some sense, that’s not my problem,” he said.

Diplomacy is no excuse for preventing Congress, as representatives of the American people, from fully understanding what has taken place in the past at Iran’s nuclear facility at Parchin and other verification issues, Pompeo said.

“This is one of the central questions of the agreement,” he added. “We need to see these agreements before we vote.”

Parchin is the location near Tehran where, according to the IAEA, Iran is suspected of carrying out nuclear arms testing, and specifically high-explosives testing of the type needed to create a nuclear blast.

Cotton, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the secret deals must be disclosed to Congress.

“The administration says this deal isn’t about trusting Iran, but that is exactly what it’s asking Congress and the American people to do if side deals related to the Parchin military facility and possible military dimensions of Iran’s nuclear program are kept secret,” Cotton told the Washington Free Beacon.

“My colleagues and I are demanding that the president produce these side agreements for congressional review,” he said. “It is hard to see how Congress can fulfill its duties if it’s kept in the dark about significant portions of the nuclear deal.”

IAEA Director Yukiya Amano announced July 14 that Iran had agreed to a “road-map” accord that would resolve past nuclear arms work.

Pompeo and Cotton said the IAEA secret side agreements govern Parchin inspections and terms for how Iran will satisfy the IAEA’s questions about past nuclear arms work.

Those question are outlined in a November 2011 IAEA report. The report lists the following outstanding nuclear weapons questions:

  • Procurement of nuclear and dual-use civilian-military equipment and materials by the Iranian military;
  • Development of undeclared methods for producing nuclear material;
  • Acquisition of nuclear weapons information and documents from a secret nuclear supplier network; and,
  • Indigenous design work on a nuclear weapons and testing of components.

Congress passed the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act that requires the administration to provide Congress with all documents, including “annexes, appendices, codicils, side agreements, implementing materials, documents, and guidance, technical or other understandings and any related agreements, whether entered into or implemented prior to the agreement or to be entered into or implemented in the future,” according to the law signed by the president.

Pompeo called the agreement “the worst of backroom deals.”

Not providing access to the side deals violates the law and indicates the administration is “asking Congress to agree to a deal that it cannot review.”

Said Cotton: “That we are only now discovering that parts of this dangerous agreement are being kept secret begs the question of what other elements may also be secret and entirely free from public scrutiny.”

Cotton: Congress Should Arm Israel for Strike on Iran

December 4, 2014

Cotton: Congress Should Arm Israel for Strike on Iran

Continued talks with Iran are a ‘grievous mistake,’ Cotton warns

BY:
December 3, 2014 1:15 pm

via Cotton: Congress Should Arm Israel for Strike on Iran | Washington Free Beacon.

 


Tom Cotton / AP

Senator-elect Tom Cotton (R., Ark.)on Wednesday called on Congress to take a “serious look” at supplying Israel with surplus B-52 bomber planes and bunker buster super bombs for a potential strike on Iran’s clandestine nuclear sites.

Cotton said that as the Obama administration pursues diplomacy with Iran in light of another extension in the nuclear negotiations, Congress should be stepping up pressure on Tehran and considering the “credible use a force,” a policy that would include arming Israel with the advanced technology needed to strike at Iran’s nuclear sites.

“In my opinion, the negotiations were a grievous mistake from the beginning, and they quickly became a sham; now they’re a farce,” Cotton told a group of reporters on the sidelines of the Foreign Policy Initiative’s (FPI) annual forum.

Congress must step up early next year “to reimpose the sanctions” on Iran that have been lifted by executive order by the Obama administration, Cotton said.

Any congressional action related to Iran “has to be, obviously, backed by credible use of force,” he said, adding that Congress should take a “serious look” at providing to the Israeli military hardware necessary to carry out a strike on Iran.

This would include high-tech B-52 bomber planes, as well as 30,000-pound bunker buster bombs that are capable of penetrating deep into Iran’s fortified and underground nuclear research sites.

This type of move could “send the right signal to our allies in the region and to the regime in Iran,” Cotton said.

Rep. Mike Pompeo (R., Kan.), a member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, also discussed with reporters the logistics of carrying out a potential strike on Iran.

Effectively striking Iran’s nuclear sites is not as complicated as some believe, Pompeo said.

“It sometimes seems insurmountable; that there’s no way we could take it on,” he said. “If you stop the negotiation, what does that mean?”

“In an unclassified setting, it takes under 2,000 sorties to destroy the Iranian nuclear capacity,” Pompeo revealed. “This is not an insurmountable task for the coalition forces, some of them we could very readily do, and we’d have to make clear to the [Iranian] regime that that was our intention.”

“We’d have to explain to them [Iran] what the prerequisites are in order to avoid such a fate,” he continued. “I’m convinced we can do so.”

Such a strike could set Iran’s nuclear program back by 24-36 months, Pompeo said.

“The engineers, the technology, the knowledge, the blue prints will still exist,” he said. “I’ll concede that. It’s not a problem that is going to be eliminated. It is eliminated when the regime changes.”

The lawmakers also hinted that the Obama administration has been conducting its own diplomacy with Iran behind the scenes, potentially on the issue of partnering with Tehran to combat the Islamic State in Iraq.

“Well, we sent them letters,” Pompeo said, referring to the disclosure of several letters sent by President Obama to Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. “There are absolutely discussions going on.”

As nuclear negotiations with Iran continue, the regime is marching toward a nuclear weapon, Cotton warned.

“Congress’ role will be to put an end to these negotiations,” Cotton said. “Iran is getting everything that it wants in slow motion, so why would they ever reach a final agreement?”

“They’ve got just about 5 billion dollars in sanctions relief over the next seven months,” he continued. “But we keep conceding on uranium enrichment and centrifuges, and plutonium production, ballistic missile production, lack of true disclosure and verification.”

“So I think the adults in Congress need to step in early in the new year” to reimpose sanctions and pass legislation that would give the Senate final say over any potential deal that is struck with Iran, he said.