President Donald Trump threw out the Iran deal Tuesday and the reaction from the biggest players and the media’s thoughtful left has been a bit, uh, histrionic, to say the least.
CNN’s Amanpour: “I would describe pulling out of this deal [nuke deal] as possibly the greatest deliberate act of self-harm and self-sabotage in geo-strategic politics in the modern era.” @camanpour
— Mohsen Milani (@milanimohsen) May 8, 2018
The greatest act of self-sabotage in the modern era? That’s quite an infamous accomplishment, particularly because the Iran deal did almost literally nothing for the U.S. It helped Europe by setting up a pathway for energy arrangements with Iran. It helped Russia gain power by playing energy broker between the two. It helped Iran achieve their nuclear ambitions. But the U.S.? We got the pleasure of being blackmailed. It remains a mystery why the Obama administration struck the deal to begin with, but time will likely reveal those motivations.
In the short term, we’ll have to contend with the Obama team’s wringing of hands (former Secretary of State John Kerry’s appeals to Iran to save the deal prior to Trump’s announcement was the first sign of panic). And the former president himself definitely had his say Tuesday after Trump pulled the U.S. out of the deal.
First, the JCPOA was not just an agreement between my Administration and the Iranian government. After years of building an international coalition that could impose crippling sanctions on Iran, we reached the JCPOA together with the United Kingdom, France, Germany, the European Union, Russia, China, and Iran. It is a multilateral arms control deal, unanimously endorsed by a United Nations Security Council Resolution.
Second, the JCPOA has worked in rolling back Iran’s nuclear program. For decades, Iran had steadily advanced its nuclear program, approaching the point where they could rapidly produce enough fissile material to build a bomb. The JCPOA put a lid on that breakout capacity. Since the JCPOA was implemented, Iran has destroyed the core of a reactor that could have produced weapons-grade plutonium; removed two-thirds of its centrifuges (over 13,000) and placed them under international monitoring; and eliminated 97 percent of its stockpile of enriched uranium – the raw materials necessary for a bomb. So by any measure, the JCPOA has imposed strict limitations on Iran’s nuclear program and achieved real results.
Third, the JCPOA does not rely on trust – it is rooted in the most far-reaching inspections and verification regime ever negotiated in an arms control deal. Iran’s nuclear facilities are strictly monitored. International monitors also have access to Iran’s entire nuclear supply chain, so that we can catch them if they cheat. Without the JCPOA, this monitoring and inspections regime would go away.
Fourth, Iran is complying with the JCPOA. That was not simply the view of my Administration. The United States intelligence community has continued to find that Iran is meeting its responsibilities under the deal, and has reported as much to Congress. So have our closest allies, and the international agency responsible for verifying Iranian compliance – the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Fifth, the JCPOA does not expire. The prohibition on Iran ever obtaining a nuclear weapon is permanent. Some of the most important and intrusive inspections codified by the JCPOA are permanent. Even as some of the provisions in the JCPOA do become less strict with time, this won’t happen until ten, fifteen, twenty, or twenty-five years into the deal, so there is little reason to put those restrictions at risk today.
Finally, the JCPOA was never intended to solve all of our problems with Iran. We were clear-eyed that Iran engages in destabilizing behavior – including support for terrorism, and threats toward Israel and its neighbors. But that’s precisely why it was so important that we prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Every aspect of Iranian behavior that is troubling is far more dangerous if their nuclear program is unconstrained. Our ability to confront Iran’s destabilizing behavior – and to sustain a unity of purpose with our allies – is strengthened with the JCPOA, and weakened without it.
Well with that kind of praise for himself, it sounds like Amanpour must certainly be right: how could we shoot ourselves in the foot so dramatically? TRUMP WHAT HAVE YOU DONE?
Let Commentary Magazine reporter Noah Rothman ease your minds, people wanting to be hopeful about the future. Here’s a twitter thread he created Wednesday morning with just a smattering of mainstream press stories over the past several years about exactly how problematic the deal was; primarily because Iran was being, really, really, shifty (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu now says he has proof of their subterfuge).
Iran rejects U.S. demand for U.N. visit to military sites https://t.co/XLvelnGbRu
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
Iran may have built extension at disputed site: U.N. nuclear watchdog https://t.co/CdMjnbpYBg
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
The Iran Deal "has not reined in its provocative behavior elsewhere — including testing ballistic missiles, imprisoning Americans and allegedly arming Shiite Muslim rebels in Yemen." https://t.co/m2sCbFBmBu
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
IAEA Chief Calls for Clarity on Disputed Section of Iran Nuclear Deal https://t.co/pX5ihdYNU4
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
German intel report charges Iran seeking illegal nuke, missile tech https://t.co/luoAQsoLH1
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
"Russia and Iran are trying to transform Fordo’s former fuel enrichment plant into installations for heavy isotope production." https://t.co/GMaeeSFF3Vایران-و-روسیه-به-دنبال-تبدیل-فردو-به-تأسیسات-تولید-ایزوتوپ-سنگین-هستند
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
"…determining Iranian violations and loopholes has been complicated by the excessive secrecy surrounding the implementation of the deal and its associated parallel arrangements." https://t.co/GYToaQHhPI
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
Iran plans to buy Kazakh uranium ore, seek Russia help to make nuclear fuel https://t.co/6JxDqaZcTB
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
U.S., others agreed 'secret' exemptions for Iran after nuclear deal: think tank https://t.co/yFVSjiJus9
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
And so on. You get the gist. Back to work.
— Noah Rothman (@NoahCRothman) May 8, 2018
Back to work, indeed.
The post As Dems Breathlessly Insist Obama’s Iran Deal Was Good, Let’s Reflect On Just How Bad It Was appeared first on RedState.