Have we actually and willingly sold our souls to buy political advantage? Again?
But isn't history repeating itself? Wasn't it the democrats that sought defeat in Vietnam by defunding the war, cutting off funding for South Vietnam and America retreated causing more the 2.8 million to die at the hands of the North Vietnamese, and now the democrats demanded defeat in Iraq by electing and reelecting Mr Obama and the democrats?
What's wrong with this picture?
8 Things Obama Got Wrong on the Iran Deal
Michaela Dodge / @MichaelaTHF (Daily Signal)
On Wednesday, President Obama continued his push to sell the Iran deal to an increasingly skeptical American public. Unfortunately for the White House, Obama’s charm offensive won’t solve the major flaws in the Iran deal.
- The president stated, “Between now and the congressional vote in September, you are going to hear a lot of arguments against this deal, backed by tens of millions of dollars in advertising.”
- “This is the strongest nonproliferation agreement ever negotiated,” commented the president.
- The deal “permanently prohibits Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon,” alleges Obama.
- Obama said the deal “contains the most comprehensive inspection and verification regime ever negotiated to monitor a nuclear program.”
In fact, the administration appears not to have even seen it.
Which raises the question: How can the president sell a sanctions regime to the American people, if he has not read all of its components? Simply put, he cannot.
American inspectors will not be a part of inspection teams coming to Iran.
Iran will even be allowed to take its own environmental samples, which some in Congress have compared to a fox guarding a chicken coop.
- “If Iran cheats, we can catch them, and we will,” asserts the president, ignoring decades of U.S. experience with assessing other countries’ nuclear programs wrongly.
The deal also assumes that Americans will be better in assessing whether and to what extent other countries have nuclear programs. American options to verify the deal are limited.
- “For Iran to cheat, it has to build a lot more than just one building or covert facility like Fordow. It would need a secret source for every single aspect of its program. No nation in history has been able to pull off such subterfuge when subjected to such rigorous inspections.”
In the past, the United States repeatedly misjudged other countries’ nuclear weapon programs, from the Soviet Union to China to Iraq to Libya. In the case of Libya, the United States did not even know that the country had a nuclear program until the Libyans showed surprised Americans to their undeclared sites.
- “An argument against sanctions relief is an argument against any diplomatic resolutions of this issue,” says the president.
The cruel reality is that the United States and our allies will be the main target of Iran’s “pernicious” activities, as the president calls them.
Sanctions were biting and got Iran to the negotiating table. In fact, a French negotiator recently recommended that Congress can reject the deal and that the United States will be able to get a better one about two years later. There is no reason to make Iran’s terrorist activities easier while legitimizing its nuclear program and putting Iran in a strategically stronger position in the next few years, as this deal does.
- “Congressional rejection of this deal leaves any U.S. administration that is absolutely committed to preventing Iran from getting a nuclear weapon with one option: another war in the Middle East,” says the president.
A war is more likely to result if Iran obtains a nuclear weapon, which the deal makes easier over the long run.
We often hear that war is a continuation of politics by other means. But politics is a continuation of war by other means. The purpose of politics is to create conditions that make it more likely that a country will win a war. And that is exactly what the Iranians are doing with this flawed agreement.
Fortunately for the United States, there are options other than the deal or a war in the Middle East, despite Obama’s insistence that “we would be standing alone” if this deal fails. In 2013, Secretary of State John Kerry stated that no deal is better than a bad deal. Despite his reassurances, the administration delivered a bad deal.
The way to fix the situation is to stop promoting the bad deal and rather devote as much effort and political capital to strengthening the sanctions regime. The sanctions regime is the key to slowing down Iran’s nuclear program. Sanctions were effective, according to the administration.
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