[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 103 (Thursday, June 25, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H4765-H4766]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AN AGREEMENT WITH IRAN MUST BAR ITS PATH TO NUCLEAR WEAPONS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2015, the Chair recognizes the gentleman from New Jersey
(Mr. Smith) for 30 minutes.
Mr. SMITH of New Jersey. Mr. Speaker, the deadline is bearing down on
us for the President's nuclear agreement with Iran. So, at this moment,
Congress must send the administration a strong message: In order to be
acceptable, any agreement must bar every Iranian path to nuclear
weapons.
This means the deal must last for decades. There has been a lot of
reporting of stopgap deals that would try to restrict Iran in the short
term while giving it a blank check after just some 10 years. Such an
agreement would be absurd, Mr. Speaker. Given Iran's longstanding
nefarious quest for nuclear weapons and its government's genocidal
anti-Semitism, I and the vast majority of my colleagues in Congress
would never accept such a bad deal.
Iran will also have to dismantle its current nuclear infrastructure
and turn over nearly all of its stockpile of uranium. Iran prefers to
merely ``disconnect'' its 19,000 centrifuges. That is totally
unacceptable --coming from the Iranian Government with its murderous
threats to annihilate the State of Israel and its obsessive hatred of
Jews worldwide. It is estimated that centrifuges could be reconnected
in a matter of mere months--and so they must be dismantled, and the
core should be removed from the Arak heavy water reactor.
It also means there can be no lifting or a reduction of sanctions
until the International Atomic Energy Agency, or IAEA, certifies that
Iran has complied with its commitments under the agreement; and IAEA
inspectors must be granted access to any and all suspected sites. This
access must be unimpeded, Mr. Speaker, meaning that the IAEA must be
able to conduct inspections at military sites as well. The rule must be
full access--anytime, anywhere.
Iran must also fully account for its past efforts to develop nuclear
weapons. Unless it does so, there is no way to establish a baseline
from which to measure its current capacities and potential future
violations and responsibly gauge a ``breakout time.''
Mr. Speaker, these are minimum criteria. In order to get
congressional approval, any deal the President presents to Congress
will have to have met them. The Nuclear Agreement Review Act gives
Congress the authority to review any agreement with Iran and to pass a
joint resolution barring any statutory sanctions relief. The
administration and the Iranian Government need to know that the vast
majority of my colleagues will be as firm as I am in insisting on them.
I am certainly prepared to vote against any agreement that does not
meet these criteria.
Mr. Speaker, the Obama administration has shown itself far too weak
in dealing with Iran. For example, last week, Secretary Kerry said that
the United States is ``not fixated'' on Iran's explaining its past
behavior--a significant backtracking on his earlier insistence on this
crucial point.
In fact, throughout June, we have been reading disturbing reports of
administration weakness in the negotiations on a whole range of
issues--from demanding access to potential nuclear sites to signaling a
willingness to repeal non-nuclear-related sanctions. Just yesterday,
five of the President's top former Iran advisers wrote an open letter,
warning that the agreement ``may fall short of meeting the
administration's own standard of a `good' agreement.'' The letter
outlined concerns about concessions at the same time that Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei appeared to back away from other preliminary understandings.
There are many other signs of the administration's weakness, Mr.
Speaker, in its dealings with Iran. Fundamentally, it refuses to speak
truths that are obvious to everyone: that the Iranian Government has
made itself the enemy of the United States and the genocidal enemy of
the State of Israel, and that our goal must always be to prevent it
from acquiring or manufacturing nuclear weapons now and long into the
future. A nuclear Iran would be a grave threat to our country and an
existential threat to Israel, our closest ally. That is intolerable.
The administration seems to no longer recall that Iran is the leading
sponsor of Hezbollah and Hamas.
Mr. Speaker, the case of Pastor Saeed Abedini is another sad sign of
administration weakness toward Iran. Saeed Abedini is an American
citizen. He was in Iran in 2012, visiting family and building an
orphanage, when he was taken prisoner. As a matter of fact, he had been
given permission by the Iranians to do just that. Twelve years before,
he had converted to Christianity and, later, was involved in the home
church movement in Iran. Knowing about his conversion and earlier
engagement in home churches, Iranian authorities approved his 2012
trip, approved his orphanage building, and then imprisoned him. He has
been in prison ever since then and has suffered immensely from beatings
that have caused internal bleeding, death threats, solitary
confinement, and more. His wife, Naghmeh, who is also an American and
has been a heroic champion for her husband and their two children, has
also suffered. I have chaired two hearings when we have heard from
Naghmeh, who told the compelling story of her husband, of her love for
her husband, of the gross injustice that he has been forced to suffer.
It is time the administration made this a priority and a very, very
important matter in the nuclear negotiations.
The administration is not doing enough to secure his release. There
is no doubt about it. The administration does little more than raise
his case and those of other American prisoners on the sidelines of the
nuclear negotiations because it sees the prisoners as sideline issues.
This is an American citizen, unjustly imprisoned now for over 1,000
days--and tortured--in Iran, and the administration has a few marginal
conversations with Iranian officials and considers that good enough. It
is deeply disturbing. It ought to be a central priority.
Mr. Speaker, it is also a very alarming sign of what we might expect
the administration to present us with when we return to session in
early July. That is why Congress' responsibility is to be prepared to
maintain a much firmer line on the outcome of these negotiations--when
we review the agreement--than the administration seems to be taking.
Mr. Speaker, I would also like to bring to the attention of my
colleagues a couple of excerpts from today--they were released today--
from the State Department's Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
for 2014, which reads in pertinent part:
``The most significant human rights problems were severe restrictions
on civil liberties, including the freedoms of assembly, speech,
religion, and press; limitations on the citizens' ability to change the
government peacefully through free and fair elections; and disregard
for the physical integrity of persons whom authorities arbitrarily and
unlawfully detained, tortured, or killed.
``Other reported human rights problems included: disappearances;
cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment, including
judicially sanctioned amputation and flogging; politically motivated
violence and repression; harsh and life-threatening conditions in
detention and prison facilities, with instances of deaths in custody;
arbitrary arrest and lengthy pretrial detention, sometimes
incommunicado; continued impunity of the security forces; denial of
fair public trial, sometimes resulting in executions without due
process; the lack of an independent judiciary; political prisoners and
detainees; ineffective implementation of civil judicial procedures and
remedies; arbitrary interference with privacy, family, home, and
correspondence; severe restrictions on freedoms of speech, including
via the Internet, and press; harassment and arrest of journalists;
censorship and media content restrictions; severe restrictions on
academic freedom; severe restrictions on the freedoms of assembly and
association.''
{time} 1800
That is just a few of the catalog of horrors being imposed upon
Iranians and people like our own American citizens being held in
custody, like Pastor Saeed Abedini.
[[Page H4766]]
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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