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News / Nation & World

House OKs heightened oversight of Iran nuke deal

White House says bill could cause ‘collapse’ of pact

By RICHARD LARDNER, Associated Press
Published: January 13, 2016, 6:05pm

WASHINGTON — Less than 24 hours after Iran’s detention and release of U.S. sailors, the House approved GOP-backed legislation that amplifies Republican distrust of Tehran and would give Congress greater oversight of the landmark nuclear agreement.

Lawmakers voted 191-106 Wednesday to approve the Iran Terror Finance Transparency Act, spurning a veto threat from President Barack Obama. However, the vote count fell well short of the number needed to override a veto: Speaker Paul Ryan, determined to keep the House on schedule, had the vote gaveled to a close even though 137 lawmakers hadn’t voted.

Faced with frustrated members, Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., later “vacated” the vote — essentially rendering it null and void — and scheduled another one for Jan. 26, when House Republican will almost certainly approve the legislation for a second time.

By that time, it may be too late for the legislation to have the impact its backers envisioned. The House bill would bar the removal of certain individuals and foreign financial institutions on a restricted list kept by the Treasury Department until the president certifies to Congress that they weren’t involved in Iran’s ballistic missiles program or in terrorist activities.

Yet the United States is poised to begin lifting sanctions against Iran as Tehran fulfills its obligations under the July deal. Secretary of State John Kerry said Wednesday that Iran will likely be in compliance within days. The White House said the bill could cause “the collapse” of the agreement and that the president will reject the legislation if it ever reaches his desk.

The vote came as the potentially volatile incident in Iran’s territorial waters was swiftly resolved. The 10 U.S. Navy sailors were freed unharmed early Wednesday as the White House cited new lines of communication with Iran established during the nuclear negotiations as key to the speedy resolution.

The agreement, forged by the United States and Iran and signed by five other nations, commits Tehran to cutting back over more than a decade on nuclear technologies that could be used for weapons-making. In exchange, Iran will have access to about $100 billion in previously frozen assets and fully return to the oil market.

Republicans have said sanctions relief will leave Iran flush with cash to fund terrorism.

For most Republicans, the dramatic, whirlwind incident in Iranian waters is another example of Iran’s belligerence and why it can’t be a trusted partner. Since the agreement was reached, Tehran has accelerated its missile program in violation of existing U.N. sanctions, continued to support terrorist groups and hold American hostages, they said. Iran also has remained a key ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad, who lawmakers accuse of killing more than 200,000 of his own people in Syria’s civil war.

“Iran has been on a bit of a tear,” Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., deadpanned on the House floor Wednesday. And all of this has happened before Iran “will cash in with $100 billion plus in sanctions relief,” added Royce, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Democrats who opposed the bill painted the legislation as a back-door attempt to scuttle the agreement after Obama last year won enough support to prevent Congress from derailing it. But Iran’s actions have made Democrats uneasy, and they are urging the White House to hold Tehran accountable as promised when the agreement was being crafted.

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