Majority Want Military Action If Iran Violates Deal — CNN Poll
Just consider how much more unsafe our world has become under President Obama. It comes from a prominent opponent of the deal.
“Can’t they clean everything up and say, ‘Sure, you can come in now, there’s nothing here?'” Colbert asked.
“Without an enhanced due diligence, you will have a tough time working in Iran”, Swiss ambassador to Iran Guilio Haas told the conference. Because they won’t be crushed by sanctions.
The bill, drafted by Democratic Senator Ben Cardin from Maryland, will pave the way for new anti-Iran bans in case it is approved in the Senate, al-Monitor media website reported on Wednesday. “That is not easy”.
But I firmly believe that the economic sanctions that forced Iran to the negotiating table will not, under any circumstances, compel the regime to forego its intention to develop nuclear weapons.
However, whatever critics say, the Iran nuclear deal is a done deal after the Senate Republicans failed to kill it last week.
“Besides, we should always be wary of buying into the narrative that claims that Iran is a primarily an Israeli concern”.
The president’s nuclear deal requires us to trust Iran, despite its proven track record of deceit and belligerence.
Like Mr. Rhodes Hillary Clinton reassured America. That’s why we must do more to counter Iranian aggression by stopping the flow of arms to Hezbollah and other terrorist groups, bolstering security among our Gulf allies, and increasing intelligence gathering.
We heard this vision from Karim Sadjadpour, a journalist who now studies Iran at the Carnegie Endowment for worldwide Peace. And no Republicans supported the Iran deal on Capitol Hill. Under this agreement, Iran will reduce its uranium stockpile by 98 percent. That leaves military action.
Arieh Miller, executive director of the Zionist Federation, called on the United Kingdom government to reconsider the threat Iran posed to Israel.
I joined the United States Marine Corps after 9/11 because I wanted to do my part in the war against terror. Many European and Asian companies that had suspended their trade and investment projects in Iran because of the sanctions are eager to resume their activities. Perhaps most importantly, it provides a way, short of war, to stop Iran’s nuclear program.
She’s now in Washington, at the Wilson Center, and sees the Iran agreement as a beginning.
Unfortunately, the strict and enduring guidelines for which we advocated quickly began to deteriorate from the negotiations. Iran is being dared to walk away from the deal.
Any violation of this agreement must draw a swift response from the United States and the global community.
Senator Menendez, one of the few Democrats sane enough to reject the agreement, pointed out another problem.
In a signal of how Western ties have thawed with Iran, Britain reopened its embassy in Tehran last month and British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said sanctions could start to be lifted as early as spring next year.
The United States will wind down its enmity towards Iran following the nuclear deal but would continue to raise pressure on Tehran on issues such as human rights, Khatami said. Iran has also been historically linked to Hamas, the organization that presently dominates the Gaza Strip and is known for its several conflicts with Israel in which it has fired thousands of rockets into Southern and Central Israel.
President Obama needs to rethink his priorities. What if their leaders aren’t mad Mullahs but rational people with grievances?
Donald Trump, who has said that he would not tear up the deal immediately but would work to get a better agreement, also appeared on Colbert’s show Tuesday night, leaving Moniz with an autographed copy of his 1987 bestseller, “The Art of the Deal”.