Sen. Cardin: Senate must keep level head during Iran nuclear deal review
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| Washington
The Senate Democrat who helped back the White House into submission on congressional review of any Iran deal says that Senate review of a deal 鈥 if one is struck 鈥 will be a systematic analysis, not an emotional one.
鈥淭his is going to be more objective than you think,鈥 Sen. Ben Cardin (D) of Maryland, told reporters at a Monitor-hosted breakfast聽on Wednesday.
Senator Cardin, who is the ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, explained how he and the committee鈥檚 chairman, Sen. Bob Corker (R) of Tennessee, would evaluate a final deal. International negotiators face a June 30 deadline to nail down the details of an聽April 2聽framework agreement to prevent Iran from gaining a nuclear weapon.
The review that the two men lead in their committee will be 鈥渕uch more based on what is written down, and what it means, than the emotional response of whether this is a good idea or a bad idea,鈥 he said.
Any deal will be judged on whether the international community has the time and ability to prevent Iran from gaining a weapon, and whether it has the tools to take action if the Iranians cheat, because 鈥渨e don鈥檛 trust them,鈥 he said.
Specifically, the senators will be looking at how long it would take Iran to produce a nuclear weapon if it complies with an agreement. 鈥淚s it a long enough period of time that if they cheat we can take action to prevent them from becoming a nuclear-weapons state?鈥
The committee's review will also examine whether an inspection regime is vigorous enough to be able to determine if Iran is cheating. Senators will then have to consider whether there is ample time to take action, and whether 鈥渨e have the tools available to take such action, including the snap-back of international sanctions, in an effective manner.鈥
Cardin described June as a month for committee hearings or closed briefings so that members can be 鈥渂etter equipped鈥 to evaluate a potential agreement, but 鈥渘ot in any way to cause any dynamics that impact the negotiations.鈥 He said he would resist that and 鈥渕ake sure it does not happen. I want our negotiators focused on Iran, not on Congress.鈥
Keeping a lid on "dynamics" will be next to impossible, given the strong views of some committee members, including presidential candidate Sen. Marco Rubio (R) of Florida, who is strenuously opposed to any agreement.
It contrasts also with the views of Senator Corker, who at a Monitor breakfast last week said he hoped that congressional involvement would 鈥渟tiffen the spine鈥 of the administration during negotiations. He criticized Secretary of State John Kerry as someone who appears to want "whatever it takes to do a deal."
In recent weeks, Corker and Cardin worked intensely to craft an Iran bill that would avoid a presidential veto. The bill, which gives Congress the opportunity to reject a deal as it relates to lifting congressional sanctions, passed the Senate 98 to 1 on May 6, and overwhelmingly in the House last week. The president is expected to sign it 鈥 though perhaps not in a public ceremony, Cardin commented.