Iran General NewsWhite House, lawmakers duel over new Iran sanctions

White House, lawmakers duel over new Iran sanctions

-

UPI: The White House says new sanctions being crafted on Capitol Hill may split Washington from its partners, while a key lawmaker calls them an “insurance policy.” “If you want to hold our feet to the fire on the final deal, fine, do that,” a senior administration official told The Washington Post.

 

United Press International

WASHINGTON, Dec. 2 (UPI) — The White House says new sanctions being crafted on Capitol Hill may split Washington from its partners, while a key lawmaker calls them an “insurance policy.”

“If you want to hold our feet to the fire on the final deal, fine, do that,” a senior administration official told The Washington Post.

“If people have concerns about elements of a final agreement, come in and tell us. … But that is a separate discussion from passing a sanctions bill in the middle of negotiations,” the official said.

The administration says new sanctions legislation could dismantle the Nov. 23 interim nuclear deal with Iran and derail permanent-deal talks planned for the next six months to ensure Iran can never build a nuclear weapon.

The administration also says the sanctions could create discord between the United States and the five other world powers negotiating with Iran and strengthen Iran’s anti-Western hard-liners.

The five other world powers are Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany. Those countries, along with the United States, are the five permanent U.N. Security Council members plus Germany, known as the P5-plus-1.

“The purpose of sanctions from the outset was to create a dynamic so that you can get a change in policy from the Iranians,” David Cohen, treasury undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, told the Post.

“It’s not sanctions for the sake of having sanctions,” he said.

Cohen is responsible for enforcing economic sanctions against rogue nations and combating the financial support of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez, D-N.J., a leading proponent of new sanctions, told CBS’ “Face the Nation” he considered the Capitol Hill moves to create new sanctions “a very responsible position,” noting they would take effect only if the talks toward a final agreement on Tehran’s nuclear program fail.

“I think creating a sanctions [regimen] that is an insurance policy and also creates leverage for us is incredibly important,” he told the program.

“Obviously diplomacy is something we want to see work. But we need to be ready to move forward.”

The six-month interim deal reached in Geneva, Switzerland, calls for Iran to halt production of near-weapons grade nuclear fuel in exchange for some relief from economic sanctions amounting to $6 billion to $7 billion.

Supporters say the deal gives the International Atomic Energy Agency, reporting to the U.N. Security Council, unparalleled access to Iran’s enrichment and reactor facilities, and forces Tehran to deactivate all its medium-enriched uranium, which could be converted into bomb fuel.

Iran insists its nuclear program is strictly for production of peaceful energy and medical research.

Critics of the deal say Iran already is too close to making a bomb and the agreement doesn’t force it to dismantle any nuclear facilities.

“I’m very concerned, especially with this interim deal, how we get to a place where Iran is not enriching constantly or where they’re right on the verge, always, of being able to break out and create a nuclear weapon,” Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee, the top Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, told “Face the Nation.”

“I have strong concerns about the proliferation that’s going to occur in the area as people see this rogue nation being dealt with in this manner and basically us validating them over the next six months.”

After the House passed a new sanctions bill this past summer, 76 of 100 senators, including key Democrats, urged President Barack Obama in a letter to take tougher action against Iran.

The Senate returns from its Thanksgiving break in a week.

Latest news

Iran’s Car Market Experiences Sharp Surge in Prices Afte War-Induced Stagnation

Media outlets in Iran report that the prices of many domestically produced cars have increased by 3 billion to...

UN Officials Call for a Halt to Executions and Repression in Iran

Volker Türk, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, in a statement published on April 29, strongly condemned...

Iran’s National Currency Has Declined by 120% Over the Past Year

Reports from Iran indicate a sharp surge in the price of the U.S. dollar in the open market in...

US Preparing for a Long-Term Blockade of Iran’s Ports

The Wall Street Journal, citing US officials, reported that US President Donald Trump has ordered preparations for a long-term...

War Economy and Stagflation in Iran

Unemployment and inflation in a war for which the Iranian regime is the primary cause are no longer merely...

Transfer of a death-row political prisoner to solitary confinement in Urmia, Iran

Punitive transfer of death-row political prisoner Mehrab Abdollahzadeh to solitary confinement in Urmia Prison Mehrab Abdollahzadeh, a political prisoner sentenced...

Must read

EU slaps sanctions on 32 Iranians over rights abuses

AFP: The European Union imposed assets freezes and travel...

Iran warns EU ahead of nuclear talks

Reuters: Iran warned the European Union on Tuesday...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you