[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 138 (Thursday, November 13, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H7944-H7945]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IRAN NUCLEAR NEGOTIATIONS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Mr. Speaker, we are now just 11 days away from the
November 24 deadline for the Iran nuclear negotiations.
President Obama and the P5+1 have fallen for Rouhani's stall tactics,
despite having every reason to suspect that Iran was never serious
about a deal, and that is precisely why it is imperative that Congress
use the mechanisms at our disposal to prevent the
[[Page H7945]]
administration from making any nuclear agreement with Iran that seeks
to go against our national security interests.
The administration and the P5+1 started with a weak hand, and that
has only gotten weaker. That is precisely why the Iranian regime feels
emboldened to make proclamations that it will never agree to stop its
enrichment and why it insists that it has a right to enrich and that it
must be part of the final agreement.
In just the past few days, the IAEA, the U.N. agency that is tasked
with monitoring Iran's nuclear program and ensuring its compliance with
the joint plan of action, has said that Iran refuses to answer
questions about its nuclear program and that it is impeding its
investigation into the possible military dimensions of the program.
This is amazing.
A former IAEA chief inspector said recently that he believes that
Iran lied about the number of advanced centrifuges that it possesses.
Iran itself has confirmed that it has tested a new centrifuge that
could speed up its enrichment process even further; yet the
administration is so desperate to get us to a ``yes'' that it will
overlook these very serious and dangerous transgressions.
The President has also failed to include in the negotiations Tehran's
ballistic missile program, its support for terror worldwide, and its
abysmal human rights record. The Supreme Leader right now is calling to
arm Gaza and the West Bank to fight against Israel, and it calls for
the democratic Jewish state to be eliminated.
Had the administration come to Congress before it mistakenly entered
into these discussions and asked us what we needed to see for an
acceptable deal, we would have said keep the sanctions against the
Iranian regime. Keep the sanctions, and threaten to even expand them.
We would have kept the only leverage we had against the regime until
it agreed to abandon its enrichment and other illicit activities, but
the President opted to not do that and, instead, mistakenly eased the
sanctions, injecting money into the Iranian economy and giving away our
leverage, and he still doesn't look to us for any input.
Mr. Speaker, the administration's idea of consultation is a one-way
street. It comes to brief us and our staff on the Iran nuclear deal,
but it isn't interested in hearing our input and having that reflected
in its approach to the negotiations with Iran.
Mr. Speaker, Congress must not allow this administration to continue
to circumvent us and ignore our concerns about this weak negotiating
position. We have been saying from day one that this approach was a
mistake and that the joint plan of action was a signal that the
administration has conceded on the enrichment aspect of the Iran
nuclear program.
Iran has already emerged as the clear winner in this whole charade,
and the P5+1 nations, especially the United States, look more foolish,
more pathetic, and weaker than we did when the North Korean regime
implemented the same tactics.
If the President continues to ignore our warnings on signing a
nuclear deal that we believe goes against U.S. national security
interests, then it is incumbent upon us in Congress to take firm
action.
Simply put, we must take action and get serious about preventing Iran
from obtaining a nuclear weapon, and that means ensuring that Iran
cannot enrich any uranium at all and that it must dismantle its nuclear
infrastructure.
We must start right now by sending an unambiguous message to the
administration that we will not accept any deal that leaves Iran with
even the slightest capability of producing a nuclear weapon.
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