Only fools express any trust in Obama these days or the Iranians who
have made him look the fool when no one in their neighborhood or the world
trusts a thing they say or do.
After more than six years of listening to President Obama’s unremitting
lies, when he says of the latest “accord” with Iran, “It’s a good deal” and
standing in the Rose Garden declares that the U.S. and Iran have reached “an
historic understanding” the only history being made his own ignominy and
idiocy.
It would be historic if anyone could extend either President Obama or
the Iranians any trust. Indeed, since the U.S. created its first atomic bombs
to end World War II, one nation after another has secured their own nuclear
weapons, starting with the then-Soviet Union who built theirs with plans stolen
from us!
We have been down this road before. On April 1st Wall Street
Journal columnist Daniel Henninger offered an abridged look at the
quarter-century of negotiations with North Korea which agreed to all manner of
terms, signed all kinds of agreements, and joined various international
organizations to assure everyone of their peaceful intent. He warned that “No
agreement is going to stop Iran. Agreements, and a lot of talk, did not stop
North Korea.”
“Iran,” said Henninger, “knows it has nuclear negotiators’ immunity: No
matter how or when Iran debauches any agreement, the West, abjectly, will request—what
else?—more talks. Iran’s nuclear bomb and ballistic missile programs will go
forward as North Korea’s obviously did, no matter what.”
All the back-and-forth between the White House and Congress about the
“accord” is essentially meaningless. It is mostly a debate about the
treaty-making powers the Constitution extends to the executive branch and, at
the same time, limits with legislative “advice and consent” of the Senate. For
now the Senate can only wait for whatever is decided by June 30, but it is
unlikely Obama will send it the text of the agreement.
To influence the outcome, Congress talks of the sanctions it has imposed
on Iran and says it will impose again, but Obama has no legal authority to lift
those sanctions, only Congress does.
The same day the President made the announcement, Javad Zarif, the Iranian counterpart to Secretary of State John Kerry made his own announcement. The U.S. and Iran, he said, had agreed in principle to let Iran continue running major portions of its nuclear program. “None of those measures”, intended to slow Iran’s progress, “include closing any of our facilities. We will continue enriching; we will continue research and development.”
The same day the President made the announcement, Javad Zarif, the Iranian counterpart to Secretary of State John Kerry made his own announcement. The U.S. and Iran, he said, had agreed in principle to let Iran continue running major portions of its nuclear program. “None of those measures”, intended to slow Iran’s progress, “include closing any of our facilities. We will continue enriching; we will continue research and development.”
This is the result of 18 months of “negotiations” with Iran. In the same
way the U.S. caved to North Korea since the 1990s, it has caved to Iran and it
has done so with the blessing of the European Union and the other members of
the P-5+1, France, Great Britain, Russia, China, and Germany.
For good measure, to show how wonderfully warm the relations between
Iran and the U.S. are, within hours after Obama’s announcement, Foreign
Minister Zarif accused the U.S. of lying
about the details of the tentative framework—“the historic
understanding”—saying that the U.S. had promised the immediate termination of
sanctions.
The notion that we would know if Iran was continuing its nuclear program
because the United Nations’ International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) would be
inspecting its facilities is about as credible as similar inspections in North
Korea when, in 2002, it cut the IAEA seals on its nuclear factories and
withdrew from the non-Proliferation treaty, starting a nuclear reactor. It has
pursued its nuclear weapons and missile programs ever since.
In the same fashion as the Soviet Union, China, and Israel, we didn’t know that either Pakistan or India had acquired nuclear capability until after they tested theirs. That’s how we will know when Iran has nuclear weapons. It already has intercontinental missiles with which to deliver them.
As quoted in an April 3 article by Mark Dubowitz, executive director,
and Annie Fixler, policy analyst, of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies,
they cite an unnamed “senior State Department official” as saying “The truth
is, you can dwell on Yemen, or you can recognize that we’re one agreement away
from a game-changing, legacy-setting nuclear accord on Iran that tackles what
everyone agrees is the biggest threat to the region.”
Unless one believes in unicorns and other fantasies, this latest
“accord” and what we are being told about it by the President and the State
Department is not a great achievement. It is doomed to failure because Iran has
had no intention of doing anything other than getting economic and other
sanctions removed. Time is on their side as they work to develop their own
nuclear weapons.
When Iran tests its first nuclear weapon, Obama should return his Nobel
Peace Prize.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
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