Secretary of State John Kerry, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew and
Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz will testify before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, the first such public appearance by the cabinet
officials since the deal was announced on July 14.
They briefed the entire Senate and House of Representatives in
separate closed-door sessions on Wednesday, and administration
officials have held a series of private telephone conversations and
meetings with lawmakers.
Among other issues, lawmakers said they wanted more information
about the timing of sanctions relief and ability to "snap back"
sanctions if Iran cheats, clarity on the timing of inspections and
more answers about how much money would go to Iran.
"We have leverage, but in nine months, they'll have their cash and
all the sanctions will be relieved. People will be in there signing
contracts, and then the leverage sort of shifts to them," said
Senator Bob Corker, the Republican chairman of the Foreign Relations
Committee.
Corker has said he is skeptical about the agreement, but would wait
until he knows more before deciding whether to vote against the
deal.
Ben Cardin, the top Democrat on the panel, said the closed-door
briefing had been useful but questions remained. "There are many
areas of concern that we want to get clarified," he said.
Cardin is one of many Democrats who have not yet decided how they
would vote on the deal.
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Under a bill President Barack Obama signed into law in May, Congress
has until Sept. 17 to approve or reject the agreement, in which Iran
agreed to rein in its nuclear program in exchange for sanctions
relief.
With many Republicans lining up to oppose it, Obama needs to
convince as many of his fellow Democrats as possible to back the
deal. If a disapproval resolution passes Congress and survives a
veto, Obama would be unable to waive most of the U.S. sanctions
imposed on Iran, which could cripple the nuclear pact.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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