Story highlights
- Trump is tentatively scheduled to unveil his plan during remarks a week from Thursday
- The decision stops short of completely scrapping the Iran deal
President
Donald Trump plans to "decertify" the Iran nuclear deal next week,
declaring the Obama-era pact not in US interests and launching a
congressional review period on the accord, according to two senior US
officials.
Trump is
tentatively scheduled to unveil his plan during remarks a week from
Thursday, though one official cautioned the timing could shift.
Trump said Thursday that Iran has not "lived up" to the spirit of the deal.
Speaking ahead of a dinner with military officers, Trump said it was imperative Iran not obtain nuclear weapons.
Trump
said Tehran was a supporter of terror and violence, and indicated the
deal would be a topic of discussion among the military leaders.
"You'll be hearing about Iran very shortly," he said.
The decision, which was first reported by The Washington Free Beacon and The Washington Post, stops short of completely scrapping the Iran deal, which Trump railed against on the campaign trail.
By decertifying the deal, Trump would kick the matter to Congress, which would then have 60 days to determine a path forward.
White
House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Thursday the President had
made a decision on the agreement and would announce it "soon."
"The President's team has presented a united strategy that the national security team all stands behind and supports," she said.
Trump will spell out a broader strategy
for confronting Iran, including its ballistic missile program and
support for terror networks in the Middle East, as he unveils his
decision on the Iran deal, according to one senior US official. The
official didn't specify what precise steps he may take.
Under
the new Iran strategy the current deal will stay in place, with efforts
being made within the framework of the existing agreement to try and
strengthen inspections and plan for what happens when it expires, a
senior US official told CNN on Thursday.
But
a senior Democratic aide told CNN on Thursday that lawmakers on the
other side of the aisle "believe the President should make the
certification, full stop."
"We are
not participating in preemptive negotiations, with no text, based on the
assumption that the President is not going to make the certification,"
the aide said. "The maximum point of leverage to address Iran's
nefarious activities is now, before his expected terrible decision --
not after, when he undermines America's credibility to uphold its
commitments with our allies and partners."
How will European nations react?
European
diplomats, anticipating Trump's move, have already been meeting with
Democrats and Republicans in Congress to take lawmakers' temperature and
lobby them on the merits of the agreement.
They're
seeing little appetite to reopen the deal, but say that some in
Congress worry that hawkish Republicans may introduce legislation to
force the issue.
The message these
diplomats have gotten from administration officials is that they were
"looking for a middle way" and didn't want to "kill the deal," one envoy
said. Amending the US law provided a way out, but the envoy said there
is little appetite in Congress for the hot potato Trump had handed them.
Once Trump decertifies the pact,
Congress has 60 days to re-impose sanctions, but that is something only
the majority and minority party leaders can initiate.
Democrats
back the deal and even the few who voted against it, including Sen.
Chuck Schumer of New York, have now said they will support it, the envoy
said.
And most Republicans aren't
interested in re-opening the Iran debate either, the envoy said. "The
majority of the GOP aren't excited about this," the envoy said,
comparing GOP attitudes toward the pact to the unwanted card in the game
Old Maid, which players try to get rid of as quickly as possible.
Conveying
what Republicans are saying, the envoy said, "they want to avoid a
crisis and they don't want to kill the agreement" and be saddled with
the blame for that.
European
diplomats are seeing no appetite in the GOP leadership for a fight to
reopen the Iran deal, either. Referring to Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell and House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, the envoy said they
"aren't going to do anything dangerous."
The
wild card, the envoy said, is whether hawkish Republicans, such as Sen.
Tom Cotton of Arkansas, or Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, will introduce
legislation on Iran to force the issue, "and whether McConnell will be
in a position to derail" them.
Last
month, foreign ministers representing countries that are party to the
deal -- Britain, France, Germany, Russia, China and Iran -- argued that
the agreement was designed to address issues solely related to Iran's
nuclear program, according to several diplomats who attended the meeting
that took place on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.
By
all accounts -- even that of the United States -- Iran had lived up to
its commitments under the agreement, and European leaders signaled they
were not interested in expanding the scope of its implementation, they
said.
"Not certifying would pass
the decision on the JCPOA over to Congress, with the risk that they
decide to re-impose nuclear sanctions leading to US abrogation of the
JCPOA," one European diplomat told CNN on Thursday.
"If not certifying is part of a larger
plan with Congress to stay within the deal, this would not be a direct
breach. However, all the evidence to date is that Iran is in compliance
with the terms of the JCPOA," the diplomat added.
"The
JCPOA is a hard-fought international agreement that is vital to our
security and that of our allies; our priority is working with the deal
and making it deliver for our shared security interests," the diplomat
said.
What will Congress do?
On
Tuesday, CNN reported that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Senate
Foreign Relations Committee Chair Bob Corker were spearheading efforts
to amend US legislation regarding Iran to shift focus away from the
nuclear issue -- a move that could allow the US to stay in the
multilateral nuclear deal forged in 2015 and also push back against
Iran's other destabilizing behavior, officials and diplomats said.
"Tillerson has said the problem with the
JCPOA is not the JCPOA," one senior administration official said, using
the acronym for the 2015 nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive
Plan of Action.
"It's the
legislation," the official said. "Every 90 days the President must
certify and its creates a political crisis. If the administration could
put the nuclear deal in a corner, everyone could happily get back to
work on dealing with everything else that is a problem with Iran."
Instead
of certifying that Iran is meeting its technical commitments under the
nuclear deal, the administration would report to Congress regularly
about broader aggressive Iranian behavior -- such as support for
terrorism and its ballistic missile program -- and what the
administration is doing to counter it.
This
approach could allow the US to stay in the deal but help Trump avoid
the political headache of having to re-certify it every 90 days.
It
might also keep the Europeans, who want to keep the deal, on board with
administration efforts to fight Iran's other destabilizing activities.
HR
McMaster, Trump's national security adviser, invited a small group of
Democratic senators to the White House Wednesday to discuss the
President's plans on the Iran deal, and hinted that he did not think
decertifying is the right way to go, according to two sources familiar
with the meeting.
The sources said
the meeting was clearly intended for McMaster to get ideas from key
Senate Democrats on how to avoid decertifying the Iran deal, which many
in both parties think would destabilize relations with allies and make
it harder to confront foes well beyond Iran.
These
sources said McMaster never explicitly said he disagrees with the
President, nor that he wants the President to certify that the Iran deal
is in America's national interest. But the sources say McMaster
repeatedly responded to Democratic Senators entreaties not to decertify
Iran and instead look for bipartisan alternatives by saying that he is
not the one they have to convince, suggesting they were preaching to the
choir.
McMaster's apparent unease
with decertifying the Iran deal puts him on the same side of other top
members of the Trump national security team.
During
a hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday,
Defense Secretary James Mattis said that he believes it is in the US
national security interest to remain in the agreement.
Sen.
Angus King asked Mattis: "Do you believe it is in our national security
interest at the present time to remain in the (agreement)? That is a
yes or no question."
Mattis replied, "Yes, senator, I do."
"The
point I would make is if we can confirm that Iran is living by the
agreement, if we can determine that this is in our best interests then
clearly we should stay with it," Mattis added. "I believe at this point
in time absent indications to the contrary, it is something the
President should consider staying with."
But
Mattis went on to explain that he also supports a rigorous review of
national security issues related to Iran that may fall outside the exact
terms of the agreement.
"The
President has to consider more broadly things that rightly fall under
his portfolio of looking out for the American people in areas that go
beyond the specific letters of the JCPOA -- in that regard I support the
rigorous review that he has got going on right now," he said.
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