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The other bill, written by Sen. Bob Corker (R-TN), would mandate that Congress have the opportunity to review and either approve or reject any bargain that may emerge. Vote counters in each party reportedly believe that various threats and pleading from the White House won't be enough to defeat either measure, even if Obama wields his veto pen:
Politico's story notes that the House of Representatives passed a tough Iran sanctions bill in 2013 by a lopsided 400-20 vote. Another "complication" plaguing the White House is yesterday's admission by the British foreign minister that the twice-extended nuclear talks still have "a long way to go," with the clock ticking away and patience wearing thin. The Obama administration and other Western powers have reportedly offered to allow Iran to keep thousands of centrifuges spinning and maintain its nuclear infrastructure (thus legitimizing it) as part of the bargain, which has evidently been deemed insufficiently generous by the regime. As has the deal's apparent silence on Iran's ICBM program, the purpose of which is to develop missiles capable of delivering (nuclear) payloads across oceans. Perhaps worst of all, the restrictions imposed by the rumored deal apparently would sunset after ten years, regardless of the regime's conduct. These two glaring flaws led to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's famous assessment that the White House is in the process of facilitating a "very bad deal." Regardless of tomorrow's election results, Netanyahu's country is uniquely threatened by the Iranian theocracy, whose supreme leader routinely calls for Israel's annihilation.
Iran has been listed by the US State Department as the world's top exporter and financier of terrorism for years (though they've gotten a mysterious and timely partial reprieve from the administration, underscoring the latter's desperation); they're also habitual violators of weapons embargoes and other international sanctions. Its operatives and proxies are sowing instability and chaos throughout the region by actively and maliciously meddling in foreign countries' affairs. In short, Iran is run by genocidal, lying, cheating, anti-American, anti-Semitic, terroristic thugs -- the veritable definition of bad faith actors. These are our alleged partners for peace, the same partners who staged a dramatic simulated attack on a replica US aircraft carrier at the height of ongoing "peace" talks. Former presidential speechwriter and Washington Post columnist Marc Thiessen writes that by fixating on supposed protocol breaches and political ego bruises, the Obama administration is seeking to distract attention from the substantive and deadly serious objections to the accord they're championing:
Secretary of State John Kerry, meanwhile, continues to tout Ayatollah Khamenei's alleged "fatwa" against nuclear weapons as evidence of Iran's benign intentions. This is borders on delusional for several reasons. First, Kerry obsequiously bestows "great respect" upon the "important" religious edict. If that's true, theWeekly Standard wonders whether the administration's respect extends to a host of other bloodthirsty and primeval fatwas issued by the Iranian regime. Second, Andy McCarthy cites evidence that the fatwa in question doesn't exist, and even if it did, Iran's past and present behavior suggests that it has no bearing on Tehran's illicit geopolitical designs. Also, is it any wonder that even many Democrats are exhibiting less-than-robust faith in the Obama administration's handling foreign policy? After all, Kerry is now openly stating that the US must negotiate with Syria's Assad, a man he recently likened to Adolf Hitler. He didn't do so many years ago during his Senate days, but in his current capacity as Secretary of State. That was post-"red line," of course, and pre-total collapse, resulting in today's shambolic and deadly status quo. (In Kerry's defense, at least he didn't go quite as far as his predecessor, Hillary Clinton, who hailed Assad as a "reformer"). The State Department's current line is that Obama's posture toward Assad hasn't changed, it's just "on hold.: Or something. Assad must go. Or he's an essential negotiation partner. The line is red. Or it doesn't really exist. Syria must disarm, or it's war. Or, you know, not. But trust us on the Iran deal -- we've got this.
Smart power.
Source: http://townhall.com/tipsheet/guybenson/2015/03/16/reports-democrats-preparing-to-defy-obama-on-iran-deal-n1971033
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