[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 110 (Wednesday, July 15, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H5183]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, yesterday, President Obama
announced that the final framework for a nuclear deal with Iran had
been reached.
While I am supportive of a strong deal that would prevent the nuclear
armament of Iran and thereby easing tensions with our ally Israel, no
deal is better than a bad deal.
One provision of particular concern has been the relief of
congressional sanctions that were implemented years ago. By authorizing
sanction relief, the Iranian Government will have billions of dollars
at their disposal to use for the same secretive activities that we have
grown accustomed to seeing them support.
As such, hundreds of Members on both sides of the aisle have
expressed their opposition to a deal that does not appropriately
address the shortfall of transparency or cooperation that Iran has
demonstrated repeatedly. Merely threatening them with snapback
sanctions does not go far enough to institute a level of
accountability, nor does it prove to be a viable option once sanction
relief has been in motion.
Mr. Speaker, as I have stated, I have joined with a significant
majority of both Democrats and Republicans communicating expectations
to the President on behalf of the American people for any negotiated
deal with Iran. I am very concerned these expectations have not been
met in this announced proposed deal.
The deal should never provide Iran a pathway to a bomb. This deal
does not prevent that but, rather, prolongs the time until Iran
develops nuclear weapons.
To achieve security and peace, this agreement must be long-lasting.
Any deal that allows Iran to access conventional weapons in 5 years and
ballistic missiles in 8 years is anything but long-term, anything but
peaceful, anything but appropriate.
Relief of sanctions should be earned by full compliance, access, and
transparency regarding the Iranian nuclear program. Sanction relief
loaded up-front is unacceptable. This deal fails that requirement.
Sanction relief will only provide a financial stimulus to fund the
world's number one exporter of terrorism--Iran.
During this 60-day congressional review period, I encourage all of my
colleagues and the American people to take a very detailed look at this
agreement and determine whether it is a good deal for America.
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