President Obama delivered the message that
Republicans least want to hear. Diplomacy can be difficult and
time-consuming, but unlike the neocon war first ideology, it works.
Video:
The President said,
This week, together with our allies and
partners, we reached an historic understanding with Iran, which, if
fully implemented, will prevent it from obtaining a nuclear weapon and
make our country, our allies, and our world safer.
This framework is the result of tough, principled
diplomacy. It’s a good deal—a deal that meets our core objectives,
including strict limitations on Iran’s program and cutting off every
pathway that Iran could take to develop a nuclear weapon.
This deal denies Iran the plutonium necessary to
build a bomb. It shuts down Iran’s path to a bomb using enriched
uranium. Iran has agreed that it will not stockpile the materials
needed to build a weapon. Moreover, international inspectors will have
unprecedented access to Iran’s nuclear program because Iran will face
more inspections than any other country in the world. If Iran cheats,
the world will know it. If we see something suspicious, we will inspect
it. So this deal is not based on trust, it’s based on unprecedented
verification.
And this is a long-term deal, with strict limits on
Iran’s program for more than a decade and unprecedented transparency
measures that will last for 20 years or more. And as a member of the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran will never be permitted to
develop a nuclear weapon.
In return for Iran’s actions, the international
community, including the United States, has agreed to provide Iran with
phased relief from certain sanctions. If Iran violates the deal,
sanctions can be snapped back into place. Meanwhile, other American
sanctions on Iran for its support of terrorism, its human rights abuses,
its ballistic missile program, all will continue to be enforced.
As I said this week, many key details will need to
be finalized over the next three months, and nothing is agreed to until
everything is agreed. And if there is backsliding, there will be no
deal.
Here in the United States, I expect a robust debate.
We’ll keep Congress and the American people fully briefed on the
substance of the deal. As we engage in this debate, let’s remember—we
really only have three options for dealing with Iran’s nuclear program:
bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities—which will only set its program back a
few years—while starting another war in the Middle East; abandoning
negotiations and hoping for the best with sanctions—even though that’s
always led to Iran making more progress in its nuclear program; or a
robust and verifiable deal like this one that peacefully prevents Iran
from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
As President and Commander in Chief, I firmly
believe that the diplomatic option—a comprehensive, long-term deal like
this—is by far the best option. For the United States. For our allies.
And for the world.
Our work—this deal—is not yet done.
Diplomacy is painstaking work. Success is not guaranteed. But today we
have an historic opportunity to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons
in Iran, and to do so peacefully, with the international community
firmly behind us. And this will be our work in the days and months
ahead in keeping with the best traditions of American leadership.
The reason it is difficult to believe the
Republicans that all they are seeking is a “better deal” is because they
have gone out of their way to sabotage the entire diplomatic process.
Republicans haven’t been urging the President to take a different course
in the negotiations.
Republicans have spent their time vowing to destroy
any diplomatic efforts. The reality is that sanctions and military
threats alone have not worked. Sanctions brought the Iranians to the
negotiating table, but they are not an adequate resolution to issues
surrounding Iran’s nuclear program.
George
W. Bush’s tough talk and sanctions strategy were an absolute disaster,
but Republicans never learn. President Obama is correct the door is open
for a peaceful resolution. Republicans are hiding their agenda behind a
game of deal or no deal when what is at stake is war and peace.
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