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NUKEWARS
Obama rallies key votes as Congress debates Iran deal
By Michael Mathes
Washington (AFP) Sept 8, 2015


Netanyahu missed chances to repair US ties: Rivlin
Jerusalem (AFP) Sept 9, 2015 - President Reuven Rivlin said Wednesday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has missed several chances to repair ties with Washington, which have been frayed by the Iran nuclear accord.

In an interview with army radio, Rivlin also acknowledged his own differences with the premier, especially over ties with the United States, Israel's number one ally.

Rivlin said he and the premier "exhausted the subject of differences of opinion" on relations with the outside world and were now meeting less frequently.

Netanyahu has caused ripples with his outspoken attacks on the July 14 accord on Iran's controversial nuclear programme between Israel's archfoe Tehran and world powers led by the United States.

"It seems to me that there have been three periods during which we could have envisaged a renewed dialogue with the United States despite our differences of opinion," said the president, whose role is purely ceremonial.

He pointed to the period of negotiations leading up to the Iran deal, after the signing of the accord, before the US Congress started to debate the agreement, and ahead of a possible Senate vote to disapprove the accord.

"It is up to the prime minister to decide on this subject, but his opinions are different from mine," said Rivlin, who has been openly critical of the damage to ties with US President Barack Obama's administration caused by Netanyahu's hostility to the Iran accord.

"I see the prime minister regularly once a month but we haven't had the opportunity to see each other these past two months because we haven't organised a meeting," he said.

"I think we've exhausted the subject of our differences of opinion, not on the question of the accord with Iran but on our relations with the international community."

The US Congress began tense deliberations Tuesday ahead of prospective votes on the Iran nuclear deal, as President Barack Obama gained sufficient Senate support to prevent Republicans' last-gasp efforts to torpedo his accord.

As lawmakers returned from their summer recess, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he would ask "all senators to be present in the chamber" to debate the merits and shortcomings of the international agreement aimed at preventing Iran from obtaining an atomic bomb.

Congress resumed just as the White House earned a major victory in securing support for the deal from 41 senators, the number needed to block a resolution disapproving of the controversial accord.

Senator Maria Cantwell, the lone undecided Democrat, joined the president's camp late Tuesday, becoming the 42nd senator to back the agreement. Four Senate Democrats stand opposed.

Should 41 or more vote against advancing the Republican-backed resolution, a blocking procedure known as a filibuster, the effort to kill the landmark agreement would remain bogged down in the 100-member Senate.

The White House had launched an all-out effort to get lawmakers to back the international agreement that scales back Tehran's nuclear program in exchange for an easing of crippling economic sanctions.

Despite a Republican-driven lobbying push against the accord, Obama last month had won enough support to sustain the veto he would lodge if Congress were to disapprove of the deal.

The White House made the president's veto threat official Tuesday, warning that sabotaging the agreement would prod Iran into resuming its nuclear program.

"Enactment of the resolution would deal a devastating blow to America's credibility as a leader of diplomacy and could ultimately result in the exhaustion of alternatives to military action," the White House budget office said in a statement.

The House of Representatives is expected to vote on its resolution of disapproval later this week.

But with Senators Ron Wyden, Gary Peters, Richard Blumenthal and Cantwell expressing support for Obama's nuclear deal Tuesday, there are enough votes to prevent the resolution from advancing in the Senate.

Some Democrats, including Senator Chris Coons, are reportedly suggesting they would prefer a direct up-or-down vote on the resolution instead of blocking it.

McConnell sought a final vote as well, and called on "every senator to resist attempts to obstruct a final vote and deny the American people and Congress the say they deserve on this important issue."

- 'Better than no deal' -

McConnell warned that "by almost any measure, we know that Iran will emerge stronger from this deal in nearly every aspect of its national power, and better positioned to expand its sphere of influence."

There is clear skepticism about the deal on the Democratic side too, particularly on Iran upholding its part of the bargain.

"While this is not the agreement I would have accepted at the negotiating table, it is better than no deal at all," Blumenthal said in a statement, highlighting the threat of a crumbling Iran sanctions regime if the accord collapses.

Should Washington walk away from the deal that it negotiated along with Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and Iran, "the United States, instead of Iran, would be isolated," he said.

"Iran's nuclear program would be unconstrained. Rejection would fracture our unified efforts with allies and greatly weaken international pressure on Iran and American leadership, especially if economic sanctions are needed."

Many Democrats backing the deal have done so reluctantly or with skepticism, particularly due to what Wyden called a history of deception from a "duplicitous and untrustworthy Iranian regime.

"However I have decided the alternatives are even more dangerous," Wyden said.

Meanwhile, Republican former vice president Dick Cheney blasted the deal as "madness" and "capitulation" to Iran.

"Every member of Congress swears to defend the Constitution from enemies outside our shores," Cheney said Tuesday at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank.

"A vote to reject that agreement will do that. Approving it will not."


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NUKEWARS
Dick Cheney blasts Iran deal 'madness'
Washington (AFP) Sept 8, 2015
Former US vice president Dick Cheney on Tuesday blasted the Iran nuclear deal as "madness" and said it marked a "capitulation" by world powers. Speaking at the American Enterprise Institute conservative think tank in Washington, Cheney said the deal will see the "arming and funding (of) Iran while simultaneously providing them a pathway to a nuclear arsenal." It "is not an act of peace, ... read more


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