What Kerry and Obama Tried to Keep from Congress and the Public: Iran Will Collect Its Own Samples for the IAEA
by Fred Fleitz July 24, 2015 4:00 AM
This week brought the stunning news that Senator Tom Cotton (R., Ark.)
and Representative Mike Pompeo (R., Kan.) had discovered, during a
meeting with IAEA officials, the existence of secret side deal between
the IAEA and Tehran — a side deal that will not, like the main nuclear
agreement, be shared with Congress. So critics of the agreement were
understandably eager to hear an explanation from Secretary of State John
Kerry when he and other senior administration officials testified
before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday.
The hearing produced a new bombshell: In its investigation of Iran’s
past nuclear-weapons-related work, the IAEA will rely on Iran to collect
samples at its Parchin military base and other locations.
As a former intelligence analyst experienced in the collection of
environmental samples for investigations of weapons of mass destruction,
I found this allegation impossible to believe when I heard Senator
James Risch (R., Idaho) make it yesterday morning.
RELATED: IAEA Tells Congressmen of Two Secret Side Deals to Iran
Agreement that Won’t Be Shared with Congress
In his questioning of administration witnesses, Risch said:
Parchin stays in place. Now, does that sound like it’s for peaceful
purposes? Let me tell you the worst thing about Parchin. What you guys
agreed to was [that] we can’t even take samples there. The IAEA can’t
take samples there. [Iranians are] going to be able to test by
themselves! Even the NFL wouldn’t go along with this. How in the world
can you have a nation like Iran doing their own testing?
. . . Are we going to trust Iran to do this? This is a good deal?
This is what we were told we were going to get when we were told, “Don’t
worry, we’re going to be watching over their shoulder and we’re going
to put in place verification[s] that are absolutely bullet proof”? We’re
going to trust Iran to do their own testing? This is absolutely
ludicrous.
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The issue became even more interesting when Senator Robert Menendez (D.,
N.J.), who learned about the side deal from Risch’s question, had the
following exchange with Kerry:
Menendez: “Is it true that the Iranians are going to be able to take
the samples, as Senator Risch said? Because chain of custody means
nothing if at the very beginning what you’re given is chosen and derived
by the perpetrator.”
Kerry: “As you know, senator, that is a classified component of this
that is supposed to be discussed in a classified session. We’re
perfectly prepared to fully brief you in a classified session with
respect to what will happen. Secretary Moniz has had his team red-team
that effort and he has made some additional add-ons to where we are. But
it’s part of a confidential agreement between the IAEA and Iran as to
how they do it. The IAEA has said they are satisfied that they will be
able to do this in a way that does not compromise their needs and that
adequately gives them answers that they need. We’ve been briefed on it,
and I’d be happy to brief you.”
Menendez: “My time is up. If that is true, it would be the
equivalent of the fox guarding the chicken coop.”
The revelation that Iran will collect samples concerning its own
nuclear-weapons-related activity makes the whole agreement look like a
dangerous farce. This is not just an absurd process; it also goes
against years of IAEA practice and established rules about the chain of
custody for collected physical samples.
The revelation that Iran will collect samples concerning its own
nuclear-weapons-related activity makes the whole agreement look like a
dangerous farce.
Senator Risch suggested in his remarks that the IAEA would remotely
monitor the Iranians’ taking of samples by video. But even if there were
a reliable way to ensure that Iranian “inspectors” were carefully
monitored, took samples from locations identified by the IAEA, and
provided these samples directly to IAEA officials, the process would
still be a sham, since it would still place unacceptable limitations on
IAEA inspections. To be meaningful, IAEA inspectors must have unfettered
access to suspect facilities and be free to take samples anywhere,
using whatever collection devices they choose. Only by collecting
samples at locations and with methods that Iranian officials may not
have anticipated can inspectors reliably find possible evidence of
nuclear-weapons-related work that Iran tried to clean up.
That the Obama administration would agree to let Iran collect its own
samples at Parchin (where explosive testing related to nuclear-warhead
development reportedly took place) and other sites is consistent with
reports that surfaced in June (and about which I wrote National Review
articles on June 15 and June 17) that Kerry had offered to let Iran off
the hook for past nuclear-weapons-related work. Iranian supreme leader
Ali Khamenei reportedly rejected this offer as being insufficiently
generous.
Remember also that Kerry told reporters on June 16: “We’re not fixated
on Iran specifically accounting for what they did at one point in time
or another. We know what they did.” Kerry walked back this comment, but I
believe it represented part of the Obama administration’s negotiating
strategy in the Iran talks.
RELATED: Appeasing Iran Ignores the Lessons of History
The Obama administration claims that the Iran–IAEA side deal is a
confidential and bilateral arrangement reached between IAEA officials
and Tehran, and says that it has been briefed on the deal but not seen
its actual language. As I wrote here on July 23, I find this impossible
to believe, since the apparent arrangement so clearly reflects Secretary
Kerry’s attempt last month to make concerns about Iran’s past
nuclear-weapons-related work go away.
I am glad that Senator Risch ignored the Obama administration’s
ridiculous demand to treat the side deal as a classified matter. One has
to ask, Classified from whom? Certainly not for Iran, since it is a
party to the agreement. I believe Obama officials insisted the deal was
classified in order to keep knowledge of it from the American people,
and possibly from Middle Eastern states such as Israel and Saudi Arabia
that oppose the agreement. I also believe that Congress would not know
about this matter at all if IAEA officials had not told Senator Cotton
and Congressman Pompeo about it.
More Iran Nuclear Negotiations
Congress Must Hold Obama Accountable for His Deception Over Iran
Americans Understand Iran a Lot Better than John Kerry Does
The Iran Deal Will Have Disastrous Non-Nuclear Consequences, Too
Possibly making the situation worse, Fox News analyst Monica Crowley
said in a tweet yesterday that there are additional side deals. Omri
Ceren, managing director of the Israel Project, a nonprofit advocacy
organization, e-mailed me yesterday, writing that “the Israelis are
saying there will be several more.”
These new developments indicate that not only did the Obama
administration negotiate a nuclear deal with Iran that was worse than
anyone outside the Obama administration knew only a few days ago, but it
also tried to shield a sham inspections process from congressional
review, in violation of the law. The entire nuclear agreement is not
just a bad deal; it is a deal that now displays the bad faith of the
Obama administration toward Congress and the American people. The secret
side agreements are yet another compelling reason for a large
bipartisan majority in Congress to reject the dangerous nuclear accord
with Iran.
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/421550/iran-nuclear-bombshell-Iran-police-itself
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/421550/iran-nuclear-bombshell-Iran-police-itself
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