Posted on 10/14/2017 4:02:18 PM PDT by jazusamo
President Trump has not yet pulled America out of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. But he just took a vital step toward doing so, in a landmark speech on Friday that in plain language dismantled the dangerous fictions on which the deal was built.
Chief among these fictions is the notion that a nuclear program in the hands of Irans predatory, terror-sponsoring Islamist regime could ever be exclusively peaceful . This was a phrase repeated endlessly by President Obamas diplomatic team during the negotiating of the Iran nuclear deal, and it is enshrined in the final text, as if saying could make it so.
Iran has already given the lie to this fantasy, most prominently by continuing to test ballistic missiles
. These are delivery vehicles that are only likely to be of use if Iran employs its exclusively peaceful nuclear program as cover to acquire nuclear warheads.
Citing the case of Irans longtime partner in missile proliferation, North Korea, Trump warned that it is folly to downplay Irans ambitions: As we have seen in North Korea, the longer we ignore a threat, the more dangerous that threat becomes.
Ensuring that Washington will now pay attention, Trump announced in his speech that he will not recertify that Iran is in compliance with the agreement. Under the Corker-Cardin law, passed in 2015 and officially dubbed the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act, this decertification kicks the problem to Congress, where lawmakers will have 60 days to come up with solutions.
It should help focus their minds that Trump stipulated: In the event we are not able to reach a solution working with Congress and our allies, then the agreement will be terminated. He noted that, as president, it is his prerogative to cancel Americas participation in this deal at any time.
Pulling America out of the deal would be the best course by far, and that is where any honest debate ought to end up. This signature foreign-policy agreement of President Obama, officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, is a bargain so flawed that there is realistically no way to fix it. Haggled out with Iran by six world powers Russia, China, France, Britain, Germany and the U.S. under Obama (in this instance leading from in front) the JCPOA is thick with complexities that obscure the basic tradeoffs with which Obama enticed Iran to agree to this deal.
But theres a simple bottom line. President Obama promised that on his watch Iran would not get nuclear weapons. Obama achieved this by cutting a deal that effectively paid off Iran upfront to delay a nuclear breakout until after he left office. He did this at the cost of greatly fortifying Irans predatory, Islamist regime, without ending its nuclear program. That is what Trump has inherited. As he accurately summed it up: We got weak inspections in exchange for no more than a purely short-term and temporary delay in Irans path to nuclear weapons.
The terms of this deal virtually ensure an Iranian nuclear breakout, on a scale and with a reach that will be even more dangerous when it comes. Without requiring any change in the nature of Irans terror-sponsoring regime, the deal dignified Tehran on the world stage, greatly eased global sanctions, allowed Iran access to more than $100 billion in frozen oil revenues, and topped that off with the related settlement from the U.S. of $1.7 billion, shipped secretly to Iran in cash.
The JCPOA also came crammed with sunset clauses, set to eliminate restrictions on everything from commercial-scale enrichment of uranium, to the design and launch of ballistic missiles capable of carrying nuclear weapons. It is also full of loopholes, such as the wording in which Iran is not required, but merely called upon, to stop developing nuclear-capable missiles.
To maneuver this unpopular deal past the American public and through the political mills of Washington, Obamas White House skipped submitting it the Senate for ratification as a treaty where it would almost certainly have been voted down.
Instead, Obama rushed the deal to the United Nations Security Council, where on July 20, 2015, six days after the final text was announced, it was approved as a set of annexes to Resolution 2231, before Congress had any chance to debate the substance (or discover, despite Obamas promise of transparency to Congress, the secret side deals).
Directing U.S. foreign policy away the perils and noxious commitments of this terrible deal is a daunting task. It is made all the more difficult because Irans oil-wealth is bait for lucrative business contracts fueling the chorus from Europe in favor of the keeping the deal. And it is made yet more difficult by the lingering haze of talking-point narratives with which the Obama White House peddled this deal to the media, orchestrating the deals praises via the echo chamber bragged up early last year to the New York Times magazine by Obamas former chief fabulist and deputy national security adviser for strategic communications, Ben Rhodes.
Trump, in trying to counter this debacle, has begun with the expedient of laying out the truth. In his speech on Friday, he began by detailing the core problem, which is not Irans nuclear program per se, but the character of Tehrans regime worlds leading state sponsor of terrorism which, having seized power in 1979, raided the wealth of one of the worlds oldest and most vibrant nations, and spread death, destruction, and chaos all around the globe.
Trump clarified how the JCPOA threw Irans dictatorship a political and economic lifeline, noting that Since the signing of the nuclear agreement, the regimes dangerous aggression has only escalated. He listed a number of Irans specific violations of the deal, in letter and spirit, as grounds for decertifying compliance. He announced that his administration was imposing new sanctions on Irans Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which he described, accurately, as the Iranian Supreme Leaders corrupt personal terror force and militia.
None of this answers the question of what follows if America walks away from the Iran deal. But Trump has now opened the way to a robust debate, and begun clearing the road toward whatever it might genuinely take to avert the nightmare prospect of a Tehran regime armed with nuclear missiles. Thats a lot more promising for the security of America and its allies than relying until its too late on the sham of a rotten agreement annexed to a UN resolution.
Claudia Rosett is foreign-policy fellow with the Independent Womens Forum , an organization dedicated to improving the lives of Americans by increasing the number of women who value free markets and personal liberty, and blogs at PJMedia.com . Follow her on Twitter @CRosett .
I’m surprised that every other signatory to the agreement, except Israel, wants it to continue for the short term economic gain that selling dual use technology to Iran brings them.
That’s supposed to make me feel better?
maybe i have to look up type of air craft before i book commercial flights, i’d rather not support a company that seems to want profit over safety and common sense thinking in Iran deal/matter.
Liberals have figured out that Iran and the DPRK are a major threat and a nuclear detonation kills them too.
Liberal friends on the Left Coast are freaking out .
Hearing them ask “Why can't we shoot down an incoming ballistic missile and why don't we have a system in place to do so”
Why, indeed.
They profess to be shocked to learn that we had a system ready to go in 2009 until Obama killed it
Democrats are figuring out that leaving us vulnerable to nuclear attack makes Clinton's 9/11 dereliction of duty look insignificant and if we do have a nuclear attack, the Democrat party is dead
.
With all his supposed “off-the-cuff” remarks and non Yale speech, he sure as hell makes good speeches. He is as forthright and clear and principled as Reagan was.
I want to know what is in all the secret deals attached to the larger deal.
The answer is: bring all of your nuclear material and weapons to this place and time for our confiscation or we turn your country into glass. We make it credible by giving the same ultimatum to NK.
Can we have our $150 Billion back now? I wonder how much of that Obama took?
Maybe someone in heaven is actually listening to us. [Of course, they are. That is why the North Korean dictator may anger China and Russia when that volcano erupts because of the North Korean dictator stupidity. You do not set off a number of Nuclear Test Explosions Horizontally for this reason.
And now that Kalifornia is in the bullseye for Nkorea nukes they are barely waking up to reality. As for me, Hawaii only has 1 reason to exist and it's our westward military base. Those liberals judges & their ilk are sickening.
How else is a poor Lil black dude to survive after leaving office? Unlike the rest of the Congress critters scum who don't face term limits Barry only had 8 yrs to set himself up for life, thus the Iranian payoff was a nice golden parachute for him.
God only knows how many other corrupt scams & deals he got going on.
Lol, so the volcano may save the day for everyone. With lava running down the hills and the Nkorean peoples scrambling for shelters, would Fat boy still want to be playing with nukes & missiles with a volcano covering his country in ash clouds?
The nuclear tests have created a fracture that is apparently causing earthquakes that are marching Northward - towards the Volcano.
Nobody in China and Russia cares, since it is on their borders... [ /sarcasm off ]
If you stand back and admire this...it works this way.
The Senate in 2015 refused to do it’s job, period. So Senator Corker/Cardin sat and wrote a bill that says they are out of the requirement to review the treaty (something that should be impossible by the Constitution) as long as the President certifies the success of the treaty. Even Obama questioned how this was written by it passed with 99 Senators supporting it.
So as Trump decertifes this...it gives one single option (by law) to the Senate. Verify the treaty and pass it. They need all Democrats lined up and at least the two independents, McCain, Corker, and one mystery GOP Senator to pass this. The time-limit? Oh, that’s a curious thing because Corker was stupid enough to write 60-days. And the House? Don’t even bring that.
I think McConnell and Corker have a big problem. Course, if they were to play ball and get the tax reform package, the wall-construction project up, and the health-care reform package fixed up....well, there would be enough votes.
If they fail in the sixty days....the treaty dissolves only because of Senate failure...NOT Trump. The EU and the intellectuals can talk all day....but it’s a mess created by Bob Corker because no one wanted to do their job in 2015.
Yep - good article. Trump tends to ‘set the table” because he knows how much opposition there will be to anything good he tries to do - he’s doing a great job of it too.
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