[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 102 (Wednesday, June 24, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H4597]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NO DEAL IS BETTER THAN A BAD DEAL
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Loudermilk). The Chair recognizes the
gentleman from North Carolina (Mr. Holding) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOLDING. Mr. Speaker, the Obama administration and Tehran are yet
again running up against another deadline. This one comes next Tuesday
when the clock expires on reaching a comprehensive nuclear deal.
Mr. Speaker, if you head over to whitehouse.gov, there is a site
outlining the current nuclear negotiations. On the front page of this
Web site, when discussing what a possible deal with Iran should do, it
states: ``prevent Iran from using the cover of negotiations to continue
advancing its nuclear program as we seek to negotiate a long-term
comprehensive solution that addresses all of the international
community's concerns.''
Mr. Speaker, what have we seen in reality? It is a possible deal that
could block international inspectors from having unrestricted access to
all of Iran's nuclear sites to verify their compliance. Mr. Speaker,
what could Iran possibly have to hide if their nuclear work is solely
for peaceful purposes?
We have also seen a deal that doesn't require Iran to disclose all of
its previous nuclear work and possible military dimensions. It is a bad
deal because, if Iran expects the world to trust them and lift
sanctions, why not come clean?
I also see a deal that could lift all sanctions once the ink is
dried, which is a bad deal, because what would this instant relief be
rewarding? Years of covert work, violations of U.N. resolutions, and
the export of terror across the globe--no one in good faith could say
that the deal before the world right now prevents Iran from obtaining a
pathway to the bomb. If anything, Mr. Speaker, it puts them on a
pathway to the bomb.
It has been clear for some time now that this administration has been
negotiating not with Iran, but with itself. We have seen them
consistently move the goalpost on what they are willing to accept with
respect to essential components of a good deal. This ranges from the
number of centrifuges to inspections to the dismantling of nuclear
infrastructure.
The parameters of what this administration is willing to accept has
moved so many times, I don't believe it would surprise anyone if
reports emerged before next Tuesday that showed even more concessions
have been made.
Mr. Speaker, the administration needs to prevent Iran from having a
pathway to the bomb. They need to hold good on their word that no deal
is better than a bad deal.
Mr. Speaker, I don't see how anyone right now, with the exception of
Iran, could accept the reported deal as a ``good deal.'' Let's not
settle for a bad deal; let's not stand for a nuclear Iran.
____________________