Republicans Warn Biden: Nuclear Deal Requires Senate Approval

US Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) - EPA
US Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) - EPA
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Republicans Warn Biden: Nuclear Deal Requires Senate Approval

US Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) - EPA
US Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) - EPA

The Congress is stepping up pressure on the US administration to stop the nuclear negotiations with Tehran. The increase in opposition came after prominent Democratic Senator Bob Menendez warned that Iran was close to acquiring a nuclear weapon.

Republicans intensified their opposition to returning to the agreement, and about 30 Senate Republicans wrote a letter to US President Joe Biden warning him that any agreement is void if Congress is not consulted about it and if the Senate has not voted on it.

The letter, signed by Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and 32 colleagues, demands Biden complies with legislation giving Congress oversight on nuclear pacts with Tehran, complicating talks to reenter the deal.

Dated February 7, the letter emphasizes to Biden that the bipartisan Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act requires the administration to submit within five days any new nuclear agreement to Congressional oversight.

“We are committed to using the full range of options and leverage available to United States Senators to ensure that you meet those obligations, and that the implementation of any agreement will be severely if not terminally hampered if you do not,” read the letter, co-signed by 32 of Cruz’s Republican Senate colleagues.

“The submission of such materials then triggers a statutorily-defined review process and includes the possibility of Congress blocking implementation of the agreement.” the senators wrote.

The letter also warned that any agreement that is not a Senate-ratified treaty could be reversed by a new president in January 2025.

A treaty, which is far more difficult to pass or rescind than an executive order, is required by the US Constitution to be approved by two-thirds of the Senate, an unlikely scenario in a chamber with 50 GOP senators.

The signatories of the letter criticized the administration’s efforts to return to the nuclear agreement, recalling that Tehran is enriching uranium by 60 % and has expanded its stockpile of enriched uranium to more than 3,200 kilograms.



US Approves $385 Mln Arms Sale for Taiwan

Taiwan President Lai Ching-te gives a keynote address on the island's national day. in Taipei, Taiwan October 10, 2024. (Reuters)
Taiwan President Lai Ching-te gives a keynote address on the island's national day. in Taipei, Taiwan October 10, 2024. (Reuters)
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US Approves $385 Mln Arms Sale for Taiwan

Taiwan President Lai Ching-te gives a keynote address on the island's national day. in Taipei, Taiwan October 10, 2024. (Reuters)
Taiwan President Lai Ching-te gives a keynote address on the island's national day. in Taipei, Taiwan October 10, 2024. (Reuters)

The US State Department has approved the potential sale of spare parts for F-16 jets and radars to Taiwan for an estimated $385 million, the Pentagon said on Friday, a day before Taiwan President Lai Ching-te starts a sensitive Pacific trip.

The United States is bound by law to provide Chinese-claimed Taiwan with the means to defend itself despite the lack of formal diplomatic ties between Washington and Taipei, to the constant anger of Beijing.

Democratically governed Taiwan rejects China's claims of sovereignty.

China has been stepping up military pressure against Taiwan, including two rounds of war games this year, and security sources have told Reuters that Beijing may hold more to coincide with Lai's tour of the Pacific, which includes stopovers in Hawaii and Guam, a US territory.

The Pentagon's Defense Security Cooperation Agency said the sale consisted of $320 million in spare parts and support for F-16 fighters and Active Electronically Scanned Array Radars and related equipment.

The State Department also approved the potential sale to Taiwan of improved mobile subscriber equipment and support for an estimated $65 million, the Pentagon said. The principal contractor for the $65 million sale is General Dynamics.

Last month, the United States announced a potential $2 billion arms sale package to Taiwan, including the delivery for the first time to the island of an advanced air defense missile system battle tested in Ukraine.

Lai leaves for Hawaii on Saturday on what is officially a stopover on the way to Marshall Islands, Tuvalu and Palau, three of the 12 countries that still to have formal diplomatic ties with Taipei. He will also stop over in Guam.

Hawaii and Guam are home to major US military bases.

China on Friday urged the United States to exercise "utmost caution" in its relations with Taiwan.

The State Department said it saw no justification for what it called a private, routine and unofficial transit by Lai to be used as a pretext for provocation.