Without Senate Approval There Are No Treaties



Today, the Obama Administration announced that it had finalized its nuclear agreement with Iran and had agreed to sell the Iranian government a wide range of nuclear weapons and specific delivery systems with a range of less than eight hundred miles. The administration hailed the agreement as the best possible result available and challenged Republicans to develop a better alternative. In turn, the Ayatollah delivered a speech in Tehran explaining that the American Administration's announcement misstated the agreement and that the delivery systems promised had a range of seven thousand miles. Both parties have indicated that Iran's word is its bond, therefore, no inspections will be necessary. Finally, both the United States and Iran had agreed that for the next decade, neither country would sell nuclear weapons to any other nation. Iran has also committed not to exploit their having both nuclear weapons and attendant delivery systems to blackmail any of their neighbors.
The Administration’s spokesman provided color on the underlying concept that the instantaneousness of Iran completing its goal of an offensive nuclear capability would prevent a nuclear arms race in the Middle East. The real and immediate threat of Iran having the ability to blow Egypt or Saudi Arabia off the face of the earth if they began developing or threatened to purchase nuclear weapons would likely be sufficient to limit additional nuclear development in the Middle East.
Of course, the above would be crazy. But is it crazier than the United States announcing a tentative prescriptive agreement with Iran that is significantly different than the tentative prescriptive agreement announced by Iran?
The answer to the above question is yes; there is something crazier than the two parties sitting at the negotiating table and subsequently releasing completely different explanations of the crucial parts of the negotiation results. What is crazier is the position of the Administration with respect to the United States Senate and their role with respect to treaties.
The three key positions from the Administration are: (1) Should Congress approve a bill that provides that an Iranian agreement needs Senate approval, the President will veto the bill, (2) Congressional members should “hold their fire” and not discuss the negotiations until they are complete and (3) that it was inappropriate for Members of Congress to question the actions of the Secretary of State even if his comments regarding the state of negotiations are not consistent with the comments of the Iranian representatives. Continue Reading...Here

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