By Fred Fleitz
Thursday, April 07, 2016
After a recent surge in threatening behavior by Iran and
reports that it may soon be given access to the U.S. financial system, the
House Intelligence Committee opened an investigation into whether Obama
officials misled Congress about the July 2015 nuclear deal with Iran (the Joint
Comprehensive plan of Action, or JCPOA). The “historic” deal, they said, would
help bring Iran into the “community of nations” and lead to improved relations
between Iran and the United States.
While this congressional investigation is a welcome
development, it is too little and too late to reverse the Obama
administration’s policy of offering any and all concessions — including over
$100 billion in sanctions relief — to get a nuclear agreement with Iran. Most
members of Congress thought the JCPOA was a bad deal; the majority of them
voted against it last fall. But many now realize that this agreement is in fact
an enormous fraud that is undermining Middle East and international security.
As I have explained on National Review Online, in “Obama’s
Iran Deal Is the Opposite of What He Promised the American People,” the
negotiations that produced the JCPOA were an endless series of fallacies and
deceptions. To get Iran to the negotiating table, the Obama administration
foolishly agreed that the mullahs could continue to enrich uranium and develop
advanced enrichment centrifuges. This means that the timeline for an Iranian
nuclear weapon will shorten when the JCPOA is in effect, because Iran will all
the while be improving its capability to produce nuclear fuel.
Obama officials made several misleading statements about
the JCPOA last July that have come back to haunt them. These will be the focus
of the House Intelligence Committee’s investigation.
One of the most controversial of these statements was
President Obama’s and Secretary Kerry’s assertion that under this agreement,
Iran agreed to comply with U.N. Security Council resolutions barring missile
tests for eight years. But there is no language barring missile tests in the
JCPOA; this provision is buried in a U.N. Security Council resolution
(Resolution 2231) that merely endorsed
the JCPOA.
Obama officials later clarified that although the JCPOA
does not bar Iranian missile tests, existing U.N. and U.S. missile sanctions
would remain in place. But this isn’t exactly true, either. After the
International Atomic Energy Agency certified that Iran had taken certain steps
to roll back its nuclear program (a certification the IAEA made in January this
year), Resolution 2231 lifted previous Security Council missile sanctions and
replaced them with much weaker language “calling” on Iran not to test missiles.
According to diplomats cited by Reuters, this new formulation is not legally
binding and cannot be enforced under Chapter Seven of the U.N. Charter, which
deals with sanctions and authorization of military force. The Obama
administration made no mention of this in its briefings to Congress on the
JCPOA.
For its part, Iran says it never agreed to missile restrictions in the JCPOA and claims its
missile tests do not violate Security Council resolutions because they are not
designed to carry nuclear warheads. This is absurd. Iran’s missile program is
widely believed to be a delivery system for nuclear warheads. If Iran were
telling the truth, it would be the only nation in history without a
nuclear-weapons program that nonetheless developed missiles with a range of
2,000 kilometers or more. Iran is not building long-range missiles to carry
warheads full of dynamite or to fire monkeys into space.
Iran tested ballistic missiles last fall and last month.
Written on the sides of some missiles recently launched were the words “Israel
must be wiped off the earth.” Last week, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, responded to criticism of the missile tests by saying that Iran’s
future is a world of missiles, not negotiations.
Congress is worried that the Obama administration, in an
effort to make sure Obama’s “legacy” nuclear deal is not jeopardized, will
refuse to take any significant action against Iran for its missile tests.
Tellingly, the administration has studiously avoided saying that the missiles
Tehran tested were capable of delivering nuclear weapons and that they violated
any Security Council resolution. A joint letter sent last week to the U.N.
Secretary General from the United States, the United Kingdom, and France said
that Iran’s missiles tests were “inconsistent with” and “in defiance of”
Resolution 2231 but did not refer to them as a violation.
Congress knows there was at least one secret side deal to
the JCPOA that was not briefed to Congress as required by the Corker-Cardin
Act. One side deal allowed Iran to inspect itself for evidence of past
nuclear-weapons-related work; it was discovered when Senator Tom Cotton (R.,
Ark.) and Representative Mike Pompeo (R., Kan.) questioned IAEA officials about
the JCPOA during a meeting in Vienna last July. Another secret side deal
appears to require the IAEA to dumb down its reports on Iran’s nuclear program
and its compliance with the JCPOA.
Congressional investigators are also troubled that
contrary to administration claims that the JCPOA has the strongest verification
provisions in history, the IAEA is unable to visit military facilities because
the Iranian parliament approved an alternative version of the deal last October
that put these facilities off-limits. The Obama administration has not publicly
responded to the Iranian parliament’s action.
One of Congress’s newest concerns about the JCPOA stems
from reports that the Obama administration is considering giving Iran at least
partial access to the U.S. financial system. As Ilan Berman wrote last week on
NRO, the administration may be about to violate promises it made to Congress
last summer that it would not give Iran access to U.S. financial institutions
or allow it to engage in off-shore dollar transactions with U.S. banks. If so,
this would represent another concession to Iran and a sign that Congress cannot
trust anything Obama officials have said about the JCPOA.
The House Intelligence Committee will also review a
growing list of other belligerent actions by Iran contradicting the Obama
administration’s claim that the JCPOA will help bring Iran into the community
of nations. On March 29, for instance, the U.S. Navy intercepted an Iranian
ship in the Persian Gulf that was transporting 1,500 Kalashnikov assault
rifles, 200 rocket-propelled grenade launchers and 21 .50-caliber machine guns
that were probably en route to Houthi rebels in Yemen. The Washington Post reported Monday that there have been at least two
similar seizures over the last two months.
In addition, since the nuclear deal was announced, Iran
has increased its support for Syrian president Bashar al-Assad’s regime, giving
financial support and supplying Iranian and Hezbollah fighters. And last week,
the U.S. indicted five Iranians for cyber attacks against U.S. banks, NASDAQ,
and a New York dam.
Perhaps the most stunning indictment of Iran’s
belligerent behavior since the JCPOA was announced was an unprecedented April
3, 2016, Wall Street Journal op-ed by
United Arab Emirates Ambassador to the United States Yousef Al-Otaiba, in which
he said:
Sadly, behind all the talk of
change, the Iran we have long known — hostile, expansionist, violent — is alive
and well, and as dangerous as ever.
Iran’s destabilizing behavior in
the region must stop. Until it does, our hope for a new Iran should not cloud
the reality that the old Iran is very much still with us — as dangerous and as
disruptive as ever.
President Obama said at last week’s nuclear-security
summit that Iran is following the “letter” but not the “spirit” of the JCPOA by
complying with the terms of the deal but testing missiles, continuing to call
for the destruction of Israel, and supporting terrorism. The House Intelligence
Committee investigation indicates that Congress rejects this ludicrous statement
and wants a full accounting of what the White House really agreed to in the
JCPOA and whether the Obama administration deliberately misled lawmakers.
The House Intelligence Committee’s investigation will not
kill the JCPOA or lead to new sanctions against Iran. Its report might condemn
Obama officials for misleading Congress, but these officials are certain to
ignore the report. Nevertheless, this is an important investigation: If it
exposes the JCPOA as a fraudulent agreement that has only exacerbated Iran’s
destabilizing behavior, it will pave the way for a Republican president (if one
is elected in November) to throw out the JCPOA entirely and begin the process
of forging a better agreement with our European allies. The committee’s
investigation also may give Americans a better understanding of what kind of
legacy President Obama really earned from the JCPOA and his nuclear diplomacy
with Iran.
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