Source: www.theblaze.com - Thursday, March 19, 2015
A top State Department official said Thursday that Congress doesn’t have much of a role to play while officials negotiate a nuclear agreement with Iran, and that Congress would only have a role late in the process when it’s time to lift U.S. sanctions against that country. Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken also repeated the administration’s line that Congress needs to stop interfering with the process as it continues, a reference to possible threats of new U.S. sanctions, and last week’s critical letter from dozens of Senate Republicans . Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Congress’s role in the Iran nuclear talks will be to lift sanctions on Iran, but not much else. Image: AP Photo/Sergei Chuzavkov “We do not believe that the country’s interests are served by congressional attempts to weigh in prematurely on this sensitive and consequential ongoing international negotiation aimed at achieving a goal that we all share: using diplomacy to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon,” Blinken told the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “While the negotiations are taking place, it is vital that we prevent any actions that would lead the world to believe the United States was responsible for their failure,” he added. “Such actions include enacting new sanctions or other measures that will be incredibly damaging to ongoing negotiations.” Blinken said the time for Congress to get involved would be after the deal has b
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