In a letter dated Tuesday and released by his office on Wednesday,
Representative Paul Ryan wrote to Obama criticizing the nuclear
agreement and asking whether it also would affect tax rules that
discourage U.S. firms from doing business with countries that
support terrorism.
"Your policy raises serious questions about whether you intend to
keep in place tax rules that discourage conducting business with
Iran," Ryan, chairman of the tax-writing House of Representatives
Ways and Means Committee, wrote.
The international pact lifts sanctions imposed over Iran's nuclear
development in exchange for it curtailing the program, but it is not
supposed to affect sanctions imposed for other reasons like support
for terrorism or human rights violations.Congress failed to pass a
resolution disapproving of the international nuclear agreement
before a Sept. 17 deadline, preserving a potential legacy foreign
policy achievement for Obama.
But lawmakers who oppose the deal, mostly Republicans, have made
clear they have not given up their fight over what they see as a
dangerous agreement reached by the Democratic administration.
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Some are writing legislation to renew existing sanctions and impose
new ones within the next few months, despite White House objections.
Ryan was the Republican nominee for vice president in the 2012
campaign. He and presidential nominee, former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney, lost the election to Obama and Vice President Joe
Biden.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by David Gregorio)
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