[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 7 (Monday, January 13, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H165]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TOUGH, PERSISTENT DIPLOMACY WITH IRAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Doggett) for 5 minutes.
Mr. DOGGETT. Mr. Speaker, next Monday, when our country honors an
apostle of nonviolence, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Iran will begin
reducing its nuclear stockpile.
This important action is part of an international agreement to begin
implementing the interim Joint Plan of Action that was announced in
November. Hope for a nonviolent resolution of our conflict with Iran
will appropriately advance on a day that honors nonviolence.
Some in Congress have been unwilling to accept these negotiations or
to acknowledge that the administration has been successful in uniting
other countries around the world in enforcing sanctions against Iran.
Indeed, in what appears to have been largely a partisan outcry, some
of our colleagues condemned the November agreement late on the Saturday
night when it was announced, without knowing what was in it, other than
that President Obama had approved it.
As a Member, myself, who has consistently voted here to impose tough
economic sanctions on Iran, I believe that these sanctions have worked.
The choice is not between sanctions and no sanctions. It is between
recognizing that our sanctions have the potential to realize our
important goals and not give up on them without even really trying.
The Iranians are well aware that this Congress can act almost
instantly to add even more stringent sanctions if they waver from
diplomacy.
Can we trust the current Iranian regime? Of course not. That is why
the painstaking task of verifying every operational detail of any final
agreement is so very important.
If done with the thoroughness required, this is a task that may well
take more than 6 months; but as negotiations for a permanent agreement
get under way, we will have new, regular inspections to verify
compliance, something we have not had in the past.
To prevent a nuclear-armed Iran, and to ensure the safety of our
families and families around the world, a measurable, verifiable
negotiated agreement is the wiser course over the unknowable, unlimited
risk of war.
Those who would intrude on these fragile negotiations now only
increase the danger of Iran becoming a nuclear-armed power. They would
undermine the international coalition that has enforced the existing
sanctions, and they would empower those hard-line ayatollahs, giving
them a pretext to stop progress, giving that to the very people, who
reject any cooperation and regularly demand death to America and death
to Israel.
Congress must not impede the diplomatic alternative to war.
Ultimately, that diplomacy may not be successful. It may not achieve a
final, verifiable agreement; but we should make every reasonable effort
toward that end.
There are no more important issues considered in this Capitol
Building, undertaken by this Congress, than the questions of war and
peace.
Just as I do not trust Iran, I do not trust war as the best way to
prevent a nuclear Iran, and war is the true alternative offered by
those here who would interfere or limit these negotiations.
Starting a war in Iraq cost us so very dearly, and it did not make us
safer. Let's not repeat that deadly mistake.
Congress should commend Secretary of State John Kerry, Under
Secretary Wendy Sherman, and President Barack Obama for their
leadership through tough, persistent diplomacy, through the wise use of
American power.
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