U.S. Caves to Key Iranian Demands as Nuke Deal Comes Together

T. Belman. No biggie. If the US can agree to a 10 year sunset clause, it can agree to Iran getting the bomb a few years earlier. What difference does it make?

Limited options for Congress as Obama seeks to bypass lawmakers

BY: Adam Kredo, FREE BEACON

LAUSSANE, Switzerland—The Obama administration is giving in to Iranian demands about the scope of its nuclear program as negotiators work to finalize a framework agreement in the coming days, according to sources familiar with the administration’s position in the negotiations.

U.S. negotiators are said to have given up ground on demands that Iran be forced to disclose the full range of its nuclear activities at the outset of a nuclear deal, a concession experts say would gut the verification the Obama administration has vowed would stand as the crux of a deal with Iran.

Until recently, the Obama administration had maintained that it would guarantee oversight on Tehran’s program well into the future, and that it would take the necessary steps to ensure that oversight would be effective. The issue has now emerged as a key sticking point in the talks.

Concern from sources familiar with U.S. concessions in the talks comes amid reports that Iran could be permitted to continue running nuclear centrifuges at an underground site once suspected of housing illicit activities.

This type of concession would allow Iran to continue work related to its nuclear weapons program, even under the eye of international inspectors. If Iran removes inspectors—as it has in the past—it would be left with a nuclear infrastructure immune from a strike by Western forces.

“Once again, in the face of Iran’s intransigence, the U.S. is leading an effort to cave even more toward Iran—this time by whitewashing Tehran’s decades of lying about nuclear weapons work and current lack of cooperation with the [International Atomic Energy Agency],” said one Western source briefed on the talks but who was not permitted to speak on record.

With the White House pressing to finalize a deal, U.S. diplomats have moved further away from their demands that Iran be subjected to oversight over its nuclear infrastructure.

“Instead of ensuring that Iran answers all the outstanding questions about the past and current military dimensions of their nuclear work in order to obtain sanctions relief, the U.S. is now revising down what they need to do,” said the source. “That is a terrible mistake—if we don’t have a baseline to judge their past work, we can’t tell if they are cheating in the future, and if they won’t answer now, before getting rewarded, why would they come clean in the future?”

The United States is now willing to let Iran keep many of its most controversial military sites closed to inspectors until international sanctions pressure has been lifted, according to sources.

This scenario has been criticized by nuclear experts, including David Albright, founder and president of the Institute for Science and International Security.

Albright told Congress in November that “a prerequisite for any comprehensive agreement is for the IAEA to know when Iran sought nuclear weapons, how far it got, what types it sought to develop, and how and where it did this work.”

“The IAEA needs a good baseline of Iran’s military nuclear activities, including the manufacturing of equipment for the program and any weaponization related studies, equipment, and locations,” Albright said.

One policy expert familiar with the concessions told the Washington Free Beacon that it would be difficult for the administration to justify greater concessions given the centrality of this issue in the broader debate.

“The Obama administration has gone all-in on the importance of verification,” said the source, who asked for anonymity because the administration has been known to retaliate against critics in the policy community. “But without knowing what the Iranians have it’s impossible for the IAEA to verify that they’ve given it up.”

A lesser emphasis is also being placed on Iran coming clean about its past efforts to build nuclear weapons. The Islamic Republic continues to stall United Nations efforts to determine the extent of its past weapons work, according to the Wall Street Journal.

By placing disclosure of Iran’s past military efforts on the back burner, the administration could harm the ability of outside inspectors to take full inventory of Iran’s nuclear know-how, according to sources familiar with the situation.

It also could jeopardize efforts to keep Iran at least one year away from building a bomb, sources said.

On the diplomatic front, greater concessions are fueling fears among U.S. allies that Iran will emerge from the negations as a stronger regional power.

March 27, 2015 | 6 Comments »

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6 Comments / 6 Comments

  1. woolymammoth Said:

    Netanyahu is hunkering down. Choosing his fights. Who else has raised this issue and put is neck on the block. We all know thanks to Ted here precisely the pressre he is under from enemy Obama. Give Bibi some slack.

    I think, or at least hope, that you are right. All the Bibi critics: what else do you want him to do or should he have done? If Obama is cutting Israel loose now, he might be in a better situation diplomatically to attack now, even if more disadvantageous military? I have no idea what Israel’s real capabilities are? Can they successfully attack underground bunkers? Do they have to? Can they cripple the program without destroying the underground centrifuges? Are there certain key points in the program that can be attacked to stop it? Do they have to use nukes? EMP? What? All the critics should say what he should have done, when and what he should be doing now?

    Would Saudi Arabia let Israel planes use its airfields or at least overfly its airspace? If not, how much of this could be done successfully with cruise missiles?

  2. Just like hitler mistakenly took on the Russians, now Obama is taking on Europe for their desperate last minute gasp expressions of legitimate concerns with the exponential increases in us concessions, I don’t think china wants iraN WITH NUKES EITHER, SO LET OBAMA HANG HIMSELF, BIBI IS PLAYING A ROLE BUT IT HAS TO BE A COALITION AND Israel will need to go one step at a time. Netanyahu does not have much choice here,what do you want from the guy, he’s busy haggling with the same characters, having to buy his ha-love at the airy dairy. I never liked deri.

  3. Netanyahu is hunkering down. Choosing his fights. Who else has raised this issue and put is neck on the block. We all know thanks to Ted here precisely the pressre he is under from enemy Obama. Give Bibi some slack.

  4. The US is removing all barriers to Iran obtaining a nuclear bomb.

    It doesn’t even pretend its about anything other than making Obama look good.

    If Israel pays the price, that’s not his concern.

  5. Netanyahu’s renewed apparent betrayals and his abysmal failure to deal with Iran all along the way, augurs only woe for us.
    Do you heads of families trust that Netanyahu will protect the State and people?