The GOP’s Iran Dilemma
By Patrick J. Buchanan
July 17, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- From first reactions, it appears that
Hill Republicans will be near unanimous in voting a resolution of
rejection of the Iran nuclear deal.
They will then vote to override President Obama's
veto of their resolution. And if the GOP fails there, Gov. Scott
Walker says his first act as president would be to kill the deal.
But before the party commits to abrogating the
Iran deal in 2017, the GOP should consider whether it would be
committing suicide in 2016.
For even if Congress votes to deny Obama authority
to lift U.S. sanctions on Iran, the U.S. will vote to lift sanctions
in the U.N. Security Council. And Britain, France, Germany, Russia
and China, all parties to the deal, will also lift sanctions.
A Congressional vote to kill the Iran deal would
thus leave the U.S. isolated, its government humiliated, unable to
comply with the pledges its own secretary of state negotiated. Would
Americans cheer the GOP for leaving the United States with egg all
over its face?
And if Congress refuses to honor the agreement,
but Iran complies with all its terms, who among our friends and
allies would stand with an obdurate America then?
Israel would applaud, the Saudis perhaps, but who
else?
And as foreign companies raced to Iran, and U.S.
companies were told to stay out, what would GOP presidential
candidates tell the business community?
Would the party campaign in 2016 on a pledge to
get tough and impose new sanctions? "Coercive diplomacy," The Wall
Street Journal calls it.
If so, what more would they demand that Iran do?
And what would they threaten Iran with, if she replied: We signed a
deal. We will honor it. But we will make no new concessions under
U.S. threat.
Would we bomb Iran? Would we go to war? Not only
would Americans divide on any such action, the world would unite —
against us.
And would a Republican president really bomb an
Iran that was scrupulously honoring the terms of the John Kerry
deal? What would we bomb? All the known Iran nuclear facilities will
be crawling with U.N. inspectors.
"Either the issue of Iran obtaining a nuclear
weapons is resolved diplomatically through negotiation or it's
resolved through force," said the president, "Those are the
options."
Is that not pretty much where we are at, even if
the GOP does not like it?
Republicans seem to be unable to grasp the changes
that have taken place in this century.
With the Arab Spring, the fall of half a dozen
regimes, the rise of al-Qaida and ISIS, civil wars in Libya, Syria,
Yemen and Iraq, we have a new Middle East.
Our principal enemies are now al-Qaida and ISIS. And while both have
been aided by our old allies, Turkey, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, both
are being resisted by Iran.
But, we are reminded, Iran's regime is founded
upon ideological hatred of America. But, so, too, were Mao's China
and Stalin's USSR. Yet Nixon forged a detente with Mao and FDR
partnered with Stalin. And Ronald Reagan negotiated a strategic arms
deal with the "evil empire" of his time.
Bibi Netanyahu and AIPAC, the Saudis and Gulf
Arabs, will demand that Congress kill the Iran deal that Lindsey
Graham says is a "death sentence for the State of Israel." But one
trusts that, this time, the GOP will add a dose of salt to what the
hysterics are bellowing.
After all, it was Bibi's rants — Iran is hellbent
on getting a bomb, is only months away, and military action is
needed now to smash the whirling centrifuges — that teed up the
talks for Tehran.
All Iran had to do was prove it had no bomb
program, which was not difficult, as U.S. intelligence had
repeatedly said Iran had no bomb program.
Then the Iranians proved it. They agreed to cut
their centrifuges by two-thirds, to eliminate 98 percent of their
uranium, to halt production of 20 percent uranium at Fordow, to
convert the heavy-water reactor at Arak that produces plutonium to a
light water reactor that produces one kilogram a year, and to let
cameras in and give U.N. inspectors the run of their nuclear
facilities.
And how is Israel, with hundreds of atom bombs,
mortally imperiled by a deal that leaves Iran with not a single
ounce of bomb-grade uranium?
What does Iran get? What Iran always wanted. Not a
bomb which would make Iran a pariah like North Korea and could bring
down upon her the same firestorm America delivered to Iraq, but a
path to become again the hegemon of the Persian Gulf.
Remarkable. Iran agrees not to build a bomb it had
already decided not to build, and we agree to lift all sanctions.
And they pulled it off.
What is one or two atom bombs you can't use,
without committing national suicide, compared to $100 billion in
freed assets and a welcome mat back to the community of nations.
Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of the new
book "The Greatest Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose From Defeat to
Create the New Majority." To find out more about Patrick Buchanan
and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit
the Creators Web page at
www.creators.com .
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