President Donald Trump is expected to ādecertifyā the Iran nuclear deal, claiming it is not in the national interest of the United States. Decertification would begin a 60-day congressional review period during which the administration may propose legislation to āstrengthenā the agreement and Congress may decide to re-impose sanctions, according to The Washington Post this afternoon.
If Trump pursues this strategy he will be going against his own secretary of defense, James Mattis, who told the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday that the deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), was in the national security interest of the U.S.
He will also be going against the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Joseph Dunford who told the committee in a written statement last month that āThe briefings I have received indicate that Iran is adhering to its JCPOA obligations.ā He also warned the administration to abide by the agreement, saying, āIt makes sense to me that our holding up agreements that we have signed, unless thereās a material breach, would have an impact on othersā willingness to sign agreements.ā
Indeed, the strategy of decertifying Iranās compliance with the deal, even when there is no evidence emerging from the intelligence community or the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) of Iranian non-compliance, would also go against U.S. public opinion. Sixty-percent of Americans say that the U.S. should participate in theĀ āagreement that lifts some international economic sanctions against Iran in exchange for strict limits on its nuclear program for at least the next decade,ā according to polling data released by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs on Tuesday.
And on Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuās former national adviser, Uzi Arad, urged the White House and Congress not to abandon the JCPOA.
But the White House strategy does have its backers in the most hawkish wings of the Republican Party and a small set of Trumpās biggest political donors.
The Post credits Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) with this āfix it or nix itā approach to U.S. compliance with the JCPOA. Indeed, Cotton laid out essentially this very strategy in a speech on Tuesday at the Council on Foreign Relations in which he proposed that the president should decertify Iranās compliance with the nuclear deal based on Iranās actions in unrelated areas and toughen key components of the agreement, arguing that the deal fails to serve U.S. national security interests.
This plan has a low likelihood of success because Iranās Foreign Minister Javad Zarif says that the JCPOA will not be renegotiated and European governments have urged Trump to stick with the pact.
Despite the potential pitfalls of Cotton and Netanyahuās plan, UN Ambassador Nikki Haley embraced the approach. Haley, a possible replacement for embattled Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, tweeted yesterday, ā[Sen. Tom Cotton] has clear understanding of the Iranian regime & flaws in the nuclear deal. His [CFR] speech is worth reading.ā
But Cotton has been clear that renegotiating the nuclear deal isnāt his actual intention. In 2015, he made no secret of his desire to blow up diplomacy with Iran, saying:
The United States must cease all appeasement, conciliation andĀ concessions towards Iran, starting with the sham nuclear negotiations.Ā Certain voices call for congressional restraint, urging Congress not to actĀ now lest Iran walk away from the negotiating table, undermining theĀ fabled yet always absent moderates in Iran. But,Ā the end of theseĀ negotiations isnāt an unintended consequence of Congressional action, itĀ is very much an intended consequence.Ā A feature, not a bug, so to speak.ā
Later that same year, Cotton explained his terms for any agreement with Iran, qualities that more closely resemble a surrender document than anything the Iranians would agree to in a negotiation. Cotton said:
Any agreement that advances our interests must by necessity compromise Iranāsādoubly so since they are a third-rate power, far from an equal to the United States. The ayatollahs shouldnāt be happy with any deal; they shouldāve felt compelled to accept a deal of our choosing lest they face economic devastation and military destruction of their nuclear infrastructure. That Iran welcomes this agreement is both troubling and telling.
Indeed, Cotton and his fellow proponents of the president decertifying Iranian compliance, despite all indications that Iran is complying with the JCPOA, have a not-so-thinly-veiled goal of regime change in Tehran, a position in which the JCPOA and any negotiations with Iran pose a serious threat. Ben Armbruster, writing for LobeLog last week, detailed the ways in which Mark Dubowitz, CEO of the neoconservative Foundation for Defense of Democracies, pushes for a so-called ābetter dealā while explicitly calling for regime change in Tehran.
But perhaps a bigger pressure on Trump to decertify comes from three of his biggest political donors: Sheldon Adelson, Paul Singer, and Bernard Marcus. All three have funded groups that sought to thwart the negotiations leading to the JCPOA, including Dubowitzās FDD, and have given generously to Trump.
āI think that Iran is the devil,ā said Marcus in a 2015 Fox Business interview.
Adelson told a Yeshiva University audience in 2013 that U.S. negotiators should launch a nuclear weapon at Iran during as a negotiating tactic.
Adelson may hold radical views about the prudence of a nuclear attack on Iran, but he appears to enjoy easy access to Trump. Adelson and his wife, Miriam, who were Trumpās biggest financial supporters by far during his presidential run, met with the president at Adelsonās headquarters in Las Vegas on Monday, ostensibly to discuss the recent mass shooting there. But Andy Abboud, senior vice president Government Relations for Adelsonās Sands Corporation, told the Adelson-owned Las Vegas Review Journal that the meeting was āpre-arranged and set to discuss policy,ā according to the paper. Adelson has also financed Israelās largest circulation daily newspaper, whose support for Netanyahu and his right-wing government earned it the nickname āBibiton.ā
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