Posted on 03/27/2015 7:23:25 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
As more and more information about the nuclear talks with Iran is revealed in the press, including yesterdays gem in which the nation learned that the White House might consider allowing Iran to proceed with enrichment at a hardened, underground facilities designed to withstand airstrikes, the public grows reasonably skeptical of the true design of a nuclear accord. If the administrations aim is not merely to freeze but roll back the Iranian nuclear weapons program, actors in the region nervous about Irans ambitions believe the White House will fail to achieve this objective. Moreover, in the effort to provide Iran with deference to its interests during negotiations, the Islamic Republics proxies in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and now Yemen have seen their reach and capabilities augmented. In all of those nations, skirmishes or outright battles between Sunni forces and Shiite militias loyal to Tehran are raging with various degrees of intensity.
The administration has allowed all of this chaos to proliferate, and for what? A deal that prevents Iran from nuclearizing is in American national interests, and polls have shown that the public is keenly desirous of a peaceful halt to the Iranian nuclear program. Bipartisan majorities in surveys routinely say that the Iranian nuclear program is a threat to national security and that military force should be used as a last resort to prevent the Islamic Republic from developing a bomb. But at what cost is the United States pursuing that goal? Right now, as the Arab Worlds Sunni nations amass military coalitions to roll back Iranian influence in regions with Shiite insurgencies, it appears as though the cost might be escalating armed conflicts, more failed states in a part of the world that breeds fundamentalist terrorism, and the prospect of likely American involvement in those conflicts down the road.
But thats a pessimists view, says an official with the State Department. The truth is, you can dwell on Yemen, an unnamed diplomatic official told Politico, or you can recognize that were one agreement away from a game-changing, legacy-setting nuclear accord on Iran that tackles what every one agrees is the biggest threat to the region.
That sounds like a threat: Smile or the region gets it. But it also sounds disturbingly familiar, as though it has been said before. And, maybe, it has been said before, albeit in terms less callous. Replace Yemen with the economy and nuclear accord on Iran with the Affordable Care Act, and its 2010 all over again.
The similarities between the two issues are interesting. While the administration sees the neutralization of Iranian nuclear ambitions and the proliferation of terrorist threats throughout the region as matters that cannot be decoupled, many American do not. Similarly, even on the eve of the Affordable Care Acts passage, most Americans did not see the link between the economys persistent woes and the reformation of the nations health care system. A Gallup survey from February, 2010, found that six in ten Americans thought Obama had overlooked addressing Americas economic challenges in favor of health care reform. Pew Research Center poll from January of that year discovered the issue of health care to be a top priority for only 57 percent of the public, ranking below the economy, jobs, terrorism, social security, education, Medicare, and deficit reduction.
While polls today find that the Iranian nuclear threat is a matter that needs to be addressed, the public is vastly more concerned with tackling the threat posed by international terrorism. While the public wants Obama to walk and chew gum at the same time, the White House is singularly focused on a deal with Iran.
Indeed, some in the administration admitted as much as long ago as October. Bottom line is, this is the best opportunity weve had to resolve the Iranian issue diplomatically, certainly since President Obama came to office, and probably since the beginning of the Iraq War, said Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes at a meeting with the White Houses progressive allies. So no small opportunity, its a big deal.
This is probably the biggest thing President Obama will do in his second term on foreign policy, he said. This is healthcare for us, just to put it in context.
Thats an inauspicious comparison, but this administration continues to believe that history will vindicate the health care reform law and the corrupt and convoluted process that gave birth to it. Similarly, the administration sees a suboptimal deal as better than no deal, and they believe that future Congresses or presidents that attempt to reverse the progress they have made will find it structurally impossible. The White House theorizes that, no matter how unpopular this deal might be, it isnt going anywhere.
Thats some legacy, but this is how the administration views its role in history. Obama isnt the great communicator or a proficient compromiser. He is the used car salesman-in-chief; forever pushing a bad deal on those he is supposed to be serving, and celebrating the arrangements irrevocability once the contract has been signed. A nuclear deal that remains as deeply mistrusted as Obamacare has been these last five years is, however, a dangerous prospect. The figurative fight over the Affordable Care Act has been waged in the streets, in the courts, and in the Congress. The literal clashes over a bad deal with Iran will be conducted in the deserts of the Middle East.
Just look what he’s done to the USA in six years? Selling out to our enemies while gutting our military will be icing on the cake for him.
I think we all know the true purpose of the nuclear deal between Obama and Iran. It's all about a final solution to the Jewish problem.
No, it is his Munich Agreement, and the results will mostly likely be just or more deadly as the original agreement.
What type of treason is it when you give nuclear weapons to your most avowed enemy?
Freegards
LEX
The major difference with Obamacare is this -— NO REPUBLICAN VOTED FOR OBAMACARE.
This Nuclear deal is UNPOPULAR on BOTH SIDES of the aisle and will be REJECTED with major Democrat support if brought before congress.
The literal clashes over a bad deal with Iran will be conducted in Israel and the US.
Has any suck-up member of the press asked Obama what his ‘end game’ is in this insane Iranian negotiation?
The Deal is nothing more than, “A Pile Of Obama Droppings”
Fully aware of the years in delay of the cause - effect, the apparent future Republican executive branch is being set up for an impossible to recover from administration domestically and internationally.
That way they can blame all the problems on the Republican executive branch when they really blow up big time in a few years. That’ll get the stupid masses clamoring for the Democrats to ride in and save the day.
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