Yesterday, President Obama signed off on sanctions relief for Iran. The relief will take effect when the International Atomic Energy Agency verifies Iran has cut its enriched-uranium stocks, restructured its heavy-water facility at Arak, and dismantled its centrifuges.
In a statement, the president promised the U.S. will be ‘‘closely monitoring’’ Iranian compliance ‘‘to ensure Iran fully fulfills each and every one of its commitments.’’
But this is fiction. Recent facts on the ground — and in the air — already prove President Obama is allowing Iran to bend the deal into mush.
First off, consider Iran’s ballistic-missile test on October 10. According to the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., the test breached international law and the missile was “inherently capable of delivering a nuclear weapon.” But White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest claimed Iran’s breach was ‘‘altogether separate’’ from its responsibilities under the nuclear deal.
While the Obama administration says it will take Iran to task at the U.N., we can expect any action will, in true U.N. form, be deafeningly pathetic. Still, President Obama’s casual willingness to segregate Iran’s ballistic-missile malfeasance from the nuclear deal is catastrophic. After all, the deal itself restricts Iran’s access to ballistic-missile technology for eight years.
It does so because U.S. military leaders know that an advanced ballistic-missile capability would grant Iran the aorta of a weaponization program: the means to deliver nuclear weapons against adversaries thousands of miles away. Regardless, this ballistic turn of events was sadly predictable.
In mid-August, I argued that ‘‘Iran will wait until it has established a ballistic-missile capability before constructing an actual nuclear weapon. . . . Iran knows that it can build a nuclear delivery platform without meaningful consequences.”
Indeed, John Kerry indirectly encouraged Iran’s calculation by clarifying that ballistic-embargo breaches won’t result in a sanctions “snapback.” In that context, Iran’s missile test on October 10 wasn’t just a weapons-research test; it was a test of President Obama’s resolve. And from the hardliners’ perspective, Mr. Obama passed with flying colors.
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Source: Iran Bends Nuclear Deal | National Review Online
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