Obama’s chilling Iran nuke lie
Reports that President Obama agrees Iran should be free to make a nuclear bomb in about 10 years put the lie to his repeated vow never to allow an Iranian nuke. The broken promise is the international twin to his domestic whopper that you “can keep your doctor.”
Reports that President Obama agrees Iran should be free to make a nuclear bomb in about 10 years put the lie to his repeated vow never to allow an Iranian nuke. The broken promise is the international twin to his domestic whopper that you “can keep your doctor.”
You can’t, but Iran can keep its enriched uranium, making this lie an even bigger bombshell. As in, bombs away.
The
deal also would launch a new round of nuclear proliferation among Arab
states, with Saudi Arabia long promising to get a bomb if Iran does. Others
fearful of Iran’s dominance are sure to follow, escalating the
tit-for-tat patterns in the region into a nuclear nightmare.
In short, the unfolding nuclear landscape presents the whole of mankind with unprecedented peril.
The
terms of the developing agreement, as explained to reporters by
negotiators, vindicates concerns that Obama would surrender to Iranian
demands while claiming otherwise. He caved in with a deal that envisions
a decade-long phase-out of restrictions, allowing Obama to say that
there will be no bomb on his watch.
In reality, that is meaningless. The American stamp of approval for a nuclear Iran instantly reshapes geopolitical strategies.
Israel
faces a new era of extreme risk, simultaneously in the cross hairs of a
genocidal enemy and betrayed by its longest and closest ally. The
betrayal continued even yesterday, with Secretary of State John Kerry
blasting critics, presumably including Benjamin Netanyahu.
“Anyone running around right now, jumping to say we don’t like the deal, or this or that, doesn’t know what the deal is,” Kerry said in Senate testimony. “There is no deal yet.”
That’s
only technically accurate because Obama and Kerry are keeping the
details secret. The scam recalls how the White House hid the details of
ObamaCare until the bill was passed; it’s what the FCC is doing with
Internet regulations.
The
timing is especially suspect, with the nuclear deal moving toward
finality on the eve of Netanyahu’s planned speech to Congress next week.
Iran recently said the US was “desperate” for an agreement, and the
reasons are obvious. Getting Iran’s signature on a document, any
document, before the visit would allow Obama to take the steam out of
Netanyahu’s warning by spinning the settlement as the best possible and
making it seem unstoppable.
It will be — unless Congress finds a spine. The
White House says Obama does not plan to send the agreement to the
Senate for ratification, arguing it falls outside the definition of a
treaty.
That
shouldn’t fly, given the stakes to us, Israel and our Arab allies. But
that all depends on whether Democrats continue to put loyalty to Obama
ahead of their duty to America’s national security.
Even
a handful of Dems joining with majority Republicans would be enough to
reject any terms that allow Iran to get a nuke. In doing so, those
senators would be enforcing the refrain that no deal is better than a
bad deal.
And make no mistake — Obama has produced a very bad deal. Bad for America, and bad for the world.
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