US Senate to Debate Bill to Allow Review of Iran Nuclear Deal
April 27, 2015 11:13 AM
Associated Press
The U.S. Senate begins debate this week on a bill empowering Congress to review and potentially reject any Iran nuclear deal.
Associated Press
The U.S. Senate begins debate this week on a bill empowering Congress to review and potentially reject any Iran nuclear deal.
President
Barack Obama grudgingly backed the bill when Democrats joined
Republicans in demanding a say on any final agreement, but even with
widespread support in the Senate, proponents must first win a battle
with some colleagues determined to change the legislation in ways that
could cost them the Democratic support needed for passage.
The
high-profile debate comes as negotiators from the U.S. and five other
nations are rushing to finalize an agreement by the end of June
requiring Iran to curb its nuclear program in exchange for sanctions
relief.
U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry and his Iranian counterpart plan to meet
Monday for the first time since they laid out the framework for a
nuclear deal earlier this month. The State Department said Kerry and
Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif are to meet in New York
where the two are attending a conference on the nuclear
non-proliferation treaty.
The president is betting that won’t happen. Even if Congress disapproves, Obama will almost certainly respond with a veto, which could prove hard to override.
The
bill’s backers are trying to keep lawmakers focused on how it would
give Congress a say on a critical national security issue. They say the
measure is not meant to be about how Iran increasingly is wielding
influence in the Middle East, its support of terrorist groups or human
rights violations.
Some
senators are proposing amendments to pressure Iran to end its support
of extremist groups, stop threatening to destroy Israel and recognize
its right to exist, and release U.S. citizens held in Iran.
Such amendments could scuttle an eventual deal and be difficult for Democrats to support.
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