Despite
White House lobbying, Senator Flake opposes Iran nuclear deal
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[August 17, 2015]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Jeff
Flake announced his opposition on Saturday to the nuclear deal with Iran
despite White House lobbying to try to convince the Arizona Republican
to break from others in his party and back the accord when U.S.
lawmakers vote on it.
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The agreement that Iran reached with the United States and other
world powers on July 14 "does contain benefits in terms of limiting
Iran's ability to produce sufficient fissile material for a nuclear
weapon for a period of time, particularly at its known nuclear
facilities," Flake said in a statement.
"But these benefits are outweighed by severe limitations the
(agreement) places on Congress and future administrations in
responding to Iran's non-nuclear behavior in the region," Flake
added.
The White House had held out some hope that Flake, a Senate Foreign
Relations Committee member, would buck his party and possibly bring
some other Republicans with him in support of the agreement.
Flake was the only Republican lawmaker who traveled with President
Barack Obama to Africa in July. White House officials lobbied him
during that trip to support the deal. Flake had backed Obama's moves
on another important foreign policy initiative, establishing warmer
relations with Cuba.
White House officials declined comment on Flake's decision but noted
seven Democrats had come out in favor of the deal in the past week.
When Congress returns to work on Sept. 8, debate will begin on a
Republican-sponsored "resolution of disapproval" against the deal.
That resolution is expected to pass. Obama is poised to veto such a
measure, and would need 34 votes in the 100-seat Senate to block the
override of that veto and preserve the Iran agreement.
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The agreement would give Iran some relief from economic sanctions in
return for strict limits on a nuclear program the West has suspected
was aimed at creating nuclear weapons.
Flake backed the negotiations that produced the accord, but said, "I
cannot vote in support of this deal." Flake said while Obama's
administration has assured Congress it does not forfeit its ability
to impose sanctions on Iran "for behavior on the non-nuclear side,"
those assurances do not square with the agreement's text.
"Hoping that Iran's nuclear ambitions might change after a 15-year
sabbatical might be a bet worth making. Believing that Iran’s
regional behavior will change tomorrow - while giving up tools to
deter or modify such behavior - is not," Flake said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham and Jeff Mason; Editing by Peter Cooney,
Bernard Orr)
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