US Senator Cotton calls on Trump to decertify Iran nuclear deal

A screen grab showing US Senator Tom Cotton speaking at the Council of Foreign Relations in New York City on Tuesday, October 3, 2017.

US Senator Tom Cotton has called on the administration of President Donald Trump to decertify the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement, just hours after US Defense Secretary James Mattis said the US should remain in the international accord.

Cotton, a Republican from Arkansas and a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, told an audience at the Council of Foreign Relations (CFR) on Tuesday that Trump was correct in calling the deal “a direct national security threat.”

“Put simply, this deal only makes sense if you assume, contrary to all experience, that Iran will evolve into a peaceful, law-abiding regime in ten years,” Cotton said at CFR, a New York-based think tank specializing in US foreign policy.

During a Senate hearing on Tuesday, Mattis said Trump must consider remaining a party to the nuclear deal because the international accord serves US interests.

The remarks by the Pentagon chief were in sharp contrast with Trump's assessment that the nuclear agreement is an "embarrassment" to the US.

Trump has desperately sought a pretext to scrap or weaken the nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and get rid of the limits it imposes on the US ability to pursue more hostile policies against Iran.

The US Republican president faces an October 15 deadline for certifying that Iran is complying with the deal. Such certification is needed by US law every 90 days in order for the Congress to continue to withhold nuclear-related sanctions against Iran, itself a US commitment under the JCPOA.

The Trump administration has twice so far certified Iran’s compliance with the deal, but if he refuses to do that for a third time, then the Republican-controlled Congress will have 60 days to decide whether to re-impose sanctions waived under the deal. That would let Congress effectively decide whether to kill the deal.

This is while the other parties to the deal, along with the entire international community, have thrown their weight behind the accord, praising the Islamic Republic for its full commitment to its side of the bargain.


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