In a rare direct congressional intervention into diplomatic negotiations, the
Republicans signed an open letter addressed to “leaders of the Islamic
Republic of Iran” declaring that any agreement without legislative
approval could be reversed by the next president “with the stroke of a
pen.”
The letter appeared aimed at unraveling a
framework agreement even as negotiators grew close to reaching it. Mr.
Obama, working with leaders of five other world powers, argues that the
pact would be the best way to keep Iran from obtaining a nuclear bomb.
But critics from both parties say that such a deal would be a dangerous
charade that would leave Iran with the opportunity to eventually build
weapons that could be used against Israel or other foes.
While
the possible agreement has drawn bipartisan criticism, the letter,
signed only by Republicans, underscored the increasingly party-line
flavor of the clash. Just last week, the Republican House speaker, John
A. Boehner, gave Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel the
platform of a joint meeting of Congress to denounce the developing deal,
and Senate Republicans briefly tried to advance legislation aimed at
forcing Mr. Obama to submit it to Congress, alienating Democratic
allies.
The
letter came as Secretary of State John Kerry’s office announced that he
would return to Switzerland on Sunday in hopes of completing the
framework agreement before an end-of-March deadline. Under the terms
being discussed, Iran would pare back its nuclear program enough so that
it would be unable to produce enough fuel for a bomb in less than a
year if it tried to break out of the agreement. The pact would last at
least 10 years; in exchange the world powers would lift sanctions.
Whether the Republican letter might undercut Iran’s willingness to strike a deal was not clear. Iran reacted with scorn. “In
our view, this letter has no legal value and is mostly a propaganda
ploy,” Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iran’s foreign minister, said in a
statement. “It is very interesting that while negotiations are still in
progress and while no agreement has been reached, some political
pressure groups are so afraid even of the prospect of an agreement that
they resort to unconventional methods, unprecedented in diplomatic
history.”
A
senior American official said the letter probably would not stop an
agreement from being reached, but could make it harder to blame Iran if
the talks fail. “The problem is if there is not an agreement, the
perception of who is at fault is critically important to our ability to
maintain pressure, and this type of thing would likely be used by the
Iranians in that scenario,” said the official, who spoke anonymously to
discuss the negotiations.
The White House and congressional Democrats expressed outrage,
calling the letter an unprecedented violation of the tradition of
leaving politics at the water’s edge. Republicans said that by styling
it as an “open letter,” it was akin to a statement, not an overt
intervention in the talks.
“It’s
somewhat ironic to see some members of Congress wanting to make common
cause with the hard-liners in Iran,” Mr. Obama told reporters. “It’s an
unusual coalition.”
Other
Democrats were sharper. Josh Earnest, the White House press secretary,
called it “just the latest in an ongoing strategy, a partisan strategy,
to undermine the president’s ability to conduct foreign policy.” Senator
Harry M. Reid of Nevada, the Democratic minority leader, said the “Republicans are undermining our commander in chief while empowering the ayatollahs.”
The
letter, drafted by Senator Tom Cotton, a freshman from Arkansas, and
signed by all but seven members of the Senate Republican majority,
warned Iran that a deal with Mr. Obama might not stick. “The next
president could revoke such an executive agreement with the stroke of a
pen, and future Congresses could modify the terms of the agreement at
any time,” said the letter, whose existence was reported earlier by
Bloomberg News.
Mr.
Cotton said he drafted the letter because Iran’s leaders might not
understand America’s constitutional system. He also said the terms of
the emerging deal were dangerous because they would not be permanent and
would leave Iran with nuclear infrastructure. He noted that four
Republican senators who may run for president signed his letter and
added that he tried without success to get Democrats to sign.
“The
only thing unprecedented is an American president negotiating a nuclear
deal with the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism without
submitting it to Congress,” he said on CNN.
The letter revived an old debate about what role Congress should have in diplomacy.
Jim
Wright, the Democratic House speaker during Ronald Reagan’s presidency,
was accused of interfering when he met with opposing leaders in
Nicaragua’s contra war. Three House Democrats went to Iraq in 2002
before President George W. Bush’s invasion to try to head off war. And
Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader, went to Syria in 2007 to meet
with President Bashar al-Assad against the wishes of the Bush
administration, which was trying to isolate him.
Rather
than wait, Republicans, joined by several Democrats drafted legislation
aimed at forcing Mr. Obama to submit the agreement to Congress. But
when Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican majority
leader, moved to advance that legislation for a vote, Democrats who
support it balked at taking action before the talks with Iran concluded.
Mr. McConnell backed off, but the bill may be revived if a deal is
reached.
Among
the Republicans who declined to sign Mr. Cotton’s letter was Senator
Bob Corker of Tennessee, the Foreign Relations Committee chairman who
has been working with Democrats on Iran legislation. “We’ve got a
bipartisan effort that’s underway that has a chance of being successful,
and while I understand all kinds of people want to weigh in,” he said,
he concluded that it would not “be helpful in that effort for me to be
involved in it.”
Some
Democrats, like Representative Brad Sherman of California, said the
letter and other moves risked making it a party-line issue, in which
case it would be impossible to muster a two-thirds vote to override a
presidential veto. “The number of Democrats not willing to follow the
president’s lead is reduced when it becomes a personal or political
issue,” he said.
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