[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 17 (Thursday, January 28, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S328-S329]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NUCLEAR AGREEMENT WITH IRAN
Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, those are some things I didn't plan to say
but I felt compelled to say as a warmup to what I really wanted to say,
and that is to talk about the agreement we struck with Iran and some of
the things that have been happening since then with us, the United
States, and five other nations.
Over the past couple of weeks, the Obama administration's decision to
engage with Iran, along with these other five nations, through
diplomacy instead of military action has faced key tests. The results
are in, and the agreement that we struck--the United States, the Brits,
the Germans, the French, the Chinese, the Russians, and the Iranians--
appears to be working thus far, and, God willing, we may actually be on
our way to being safe as a result.
This test began on the high seas 2 weeks ago when the United States
and Iran faced a crisis that could have ended tragically. Two U.S. Navy
vessels carrying a total of 10 crewmembers strayed into Iran's
territorial waters. They were detained by Iran, and as many of us know,
they appeared on Iranian television. The American vessels were
somewhere they should not have been. It was a mistake.
As a former naval flight officer who served 5 years in a hot war in
Southeast Asia and another 18 years--right up to end of the Cold War--
as a P3 aircraft mission commander, I know this is a mistake we never
want to make. Defense Secretary Ash Carter acknowledged that the error
had been made, and the sailors were released unharmed within 24 hours
of being detained. Flashbacks of past hostage crises and destabilizing
tensions were on all of our minds as we watched this story unfold.
However, thanks to a more cooperative and productive diplomatic
relationship with Iran, the sailors were released within 24 hours.
As the week came to a close, we saw additional encouraging
validations that the administration's Iran strategy is beginning to
bear fruit. Following months of the most intrusive nuclear inspections
in history, international weapons inspectors concluded that Iran had
indeed followed through on its pledge in the nuclear deal to dismantle
the parts of its nuclear program that were clearly not intended for
peaceful purposes.
The International Atomic Energy Agency certified that Iran had
reduced its stockpile of enriched uranium by 98 percent and that the
remaining uranium was only enriched to levels consistent with peaceful
energy uses. The inspectors certified that nearly 15,000 centrifuges
for enriching uranium have been dismantled. That leaves Iran with only
its least sophisticated centrifuges, which can be used solely for
peaceful purposes. The inspectors revealed that a special reactor for
producing the kind of plutonium needed for a nuclear bomb in Iran will
produce no more. It has been filled with concrete instead. Finally, the
nuclear watchdogs certified that the inspections and monitoring systems
of Iran's nuclear facility and nuclear supply chain have been stood up
to ensure Iran's compliance with the nuclear deal.
All of this happened much faster than most of us would have expected.
It certainly happened faster than I expected it would. In fact, some
critics of the nuclear deal said that Iran would never live up to the
promises it had made--never. Yet, despite that skepticism, today we see
an Iran that has taken irreversible steps to dismantle its nuclear
weapons program in order to make good on its pledges.
Amid the nuclear deal's implementation, the United States achieved
another diplomatic breakthrough with Iran--one that I and a number of
my colleagues had a hand in.
The Iranians released five individuals--all dual U.S.-Iranian
citizens--that they had been detaining in Iran
[[Page S329]]
for some years. Their release was the result of intense diplomatic
negotiations. Secretary Kerry and his team of negotiators worked
overtime to secure their freedom. They deserve our appreciation and our
thanks.
I had never forgotten about these Americans, and neither had my
colleagues. Whenever we spoke or met with senior Iranian officials in
recent years, we consistently called on them to release our unjustly
detained citizens. The end result is that these Americans are free to
rejoin their families in America instead of rotting in an Iranian
prison.
The events and achievements that occurred during these 6 days were a
remarkable validation that the Obama administration and those of us in
Congress who voted to support the nuclear deal had made the right
choice. But our challenges with Iran have not vanished--not by a long
shot. Iran continues to support terrorist organizations like Hezbollah.
Iraq props up the Assad regime in Syria. Iran tests and develops
ballistic missiles in defiance of U.N. Security Council resolutions.
Another American, former FBI agent Bob Levinson, disappeared 8 years
ago in Iran, and the Iranian government needs to do all it can to help
return him to his family or, if they can't do that--if he is no longer
alive--at least help find out what happened to this American. Also, of
course, Iran refuses to recognize Israel's right to even exist.
Addressing these problems with Iran will not be easy. They will
require the same kind of intense negotiations and pressure that helped
to bring about an end to Iran's nuclear weapons program and the release
of the detained Americans. That means our relationship with Iran will
not always be composed of carrots. There may very well be times when
sticks are needed to try to convince that Nation's regime to change its
behavior toward us and our allies, including Israel.
Perhaps no action better illustrates these dynamics than the United
States' recent move to increase sanctions on Iran for its illegal
testing of ballistic missiles--something that is a clear violation of
the sanctions. At the same time that the U.S. was lifting nuclear
sanctions on Iran as part of the nuclear deal, the Obama administration
was leveling sanctions against 11 entities for their role in supporting
Iran's ballistic missile program.
Addressing our challenges with Iran over the long term will also
require this administration, along with future administrations and
Congress, to adopt a forward-thinking foreign policy that looks beyond
the rhetoric of Iran's current regime.
I have a chart here that I want to share with everyone tonight. It is
a collage of photographs. I believe these photographs were taken in the
aftermath of the decision to approve the agreement--a decision reached
by the United States and our five negotiating partners and the
government of Iran. This is a collage of photographs that indicates the
measure of joy the Iranian people are reacting to this successful
negotiation with.
I just want to say Iran is little understood by most Americans. They
have 78 million people there today. The average age of those people is
under the age of 25--a lot like the young people we see in these
photographs. For the most part, they are all educated. The lion's share
of them don't remember the Iranian revolution of 1979 and the taking of
American hostages at our embassy or the cruel Shah whom we supported
until his ouster. This is a population, reflected in these photographs,
that appears more focused on building Iran's troubled economy than
pursuing antagonizing military activities favored by the Supreme Leader
and by many of the Revolutionary Guard.
In the weeks ahead, this new generation of young Iranians will head
to the polls--sometime in the month of February--to choose the
country's next parliament, as well as an entity called its Council of
Experts, which I believe is the body that will help to choose the next
Supreme Leader of Iran. At stake for these Iranians is the choice
between the policies of engagement and economic revival being
vigorously pursued by President Rouhani, Foreign Minister Zarif, and
their supporters, as opposed to the politics of antagonism and
destabilization that are apparently favored by the Supreme Leader and
many in the Revolutionary Guard.
We have seen photographs this week of President Rouhani meeting not
just with Pope Francis--the first meeting between the leader of Iran
and the Pope in close to 20 years--but also of his meetings throughout
Europe, calling on countries, calling on businesses in order to try to
solicit and pave the way for investments not in weaponry, not in aid to
Hezbollah, but investments in roads, highways, and bridges--things that
we need, but they need them a whole lot worse. Their roads, their
highways and bridges, their airports and trains make ours look like the
21st century. They need to invest in those things.
They have a lot of oil. They have the ability to pump a lot more. I
think they pump about 300,000 barrels a day. By the end of this year,
they will have the ability to pump as much as 1 million barrels of oil
a day, and they are not going to do that without enormous investments
in their oil infrastructure. They have a great need to do that. These
young people know that. That is where they would like to spend that
money.
We should help make the upcoming parliamentary elections in February
for these voters and others an easy choice. We should continue to show
the people of Iran that their cooperation and their commitment to peace
will be rewarded. How? With economic opportunity and the shedding of
Iran's status as a pariah in the international community.
We ought to listen to these people. They are not much older than the
pages who are sitting here in front of us this evening. They are
interested in their country changing for the better. They are
interested in reform. A number of them have relatives who live over
here in our country, and there are a lot of Iranian Americans who live
here. For the most part, they are very valued citizens, and people
would be proud to call them Americans.
We need to listen to these young people who are calling for reform
and who want to reconnect Iran to the international community. Frankly,
it would be wise of us to do so for the sake of our security and for
the sake of the security of our allies and for stability in the Middle
East.
Mr. President, I see no one waiting to be recognized at this time.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak for as
much time as I may consume.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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