Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Eye on Iran: Critics Make Last-Ditch Effort to Hamper Iranian Deal






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Al-Monitor: "Skeptics of the Obama administration's nuclear talks with Iran are bringing maximum pressure to bear on negotiators ahead of the June 30 deadline for a deal. Key players both on and off Capitol Hill are raising their voices in the hopes of preventing what they say would be unacceptable concessions. Their statements suggest that a final agreement may yet attract broad bipartisan support, even as more conservative groups are already actively seeking to kill any deal. 'I think it would be incredibly irresponsible for us not to be raising concerns now and instead wait until a deal has hatched,' Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker, R-Tenn., told Al-Monitor... Influential outside groups are taking a similar stance. United Against Nuclear Iran, under the presidency of former Obama administration arms control coordinator Gary Samore, for example has begun a multimillion TV and newspaper campaign ahead of the deadline. The nonprofit advocacy group is critical of past concessions on uranium enrichment and the easing of many restrictions after a decade but says it can get behind a final deal if it avoids further concessions. 'The outstanding items could turn those concerns into real catastrophic consequences for our national security if they went the wrong way,' Mark Wallace, the group's CEO and an ambassador to the UN under President George W. Bush, told Al-Monitor. 'That's why you're seeing us and others out there saying you can't concede on inspections, you can't concede on [possible military dimensions of past nuclear research], you can't give away these last remaining items because it's just too dangerous.' Wallace said the goal of the campaign was to provide a 'backstop' for negotiators who might be too eager to reach a successful deal after more than two years of negotiations. 'As a former diplomat I feel like I have the moral authority to say that sometimes diplomats get carried away in the pursuit of a deal rather than always focus on the merits of a deal,' Wallace said. 'And our role is to remind them that the merits count here.'" http://t.uani.com/1egpXGR

RFE/RL: "A spot aired on national television by United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) -- a nonprofit, nonpartisan group whose founders include former U.S. ambassadors and a former CIA director -- claims that concessions made by the United States in the negotiations go 'too far' and that 'America can't risk more concessions.' UANI announced last week the launch of 'a multimillion-dollar television, print, radio, digital, and grassroots campaign' that pushes Washington to take a harder line on key elements of the deal, including the inspections of nuclear sites, which have been publicly ruled out by Iranian leaders. The group said the campaign, which started on June 23, will continue throughout the negotiation process, including the time allotted to the U.S. Congress to weigh in on any final nuclear accord. Mark Wallace, UANI's CEO, who served as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under former President George W. Bush, says Washington already made too many concessions to Iran under the so-called framework agreement reached in Geneva in April. He tells RFE/RL that 'further concessions' to Iran on critical issues regarding its nuclear program could lead to a 'catastrophically bad agreement.' 'We're trying to elevate the discourse to a level that is deserved for a foreign policy issue of such great consequences,' Wallace said. Wallace says his group is concerned that the tentative nuclear agreement will leave Iran's nuclear infrastructure intact and it would also allow the country to engage in research on advanced centrifuges." http://t.uani.com/1LFBKwm

NYT: "The United States warned Iran on Monday, in both English and Persian, that a preliminary agreement reached two months ago in Switzerland must remain the basis for a final nuclear deal. The warning appeared to reflect concerns among American and European negotiators that Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has been attempting to backtrack on some crucial elements of the April agreement that was forged in Lausanne, the lakeside resort near Geneva. 'We do see a path forward to get a comprehensive agreement that meets our bottom lines,' said a senior United States official, who could not be identified under the ground rules for briefing reporters. 'This path forward has to be based on the Lausanne parameters. Period.' ... The United States and its negotiating partners are no longer trying to meet the original Tuesday deadline for wrapping up a final accord. Yet American officials hope to conclude the agreement so it can be submitted by July 9 to Congress, which would then begin a 30-day review period. 'No one is talking about a long-term extension' of the negotiating deadline, the official said. 'No one.'" http://t.uani.com/1LzQU5r

   
Nuclear Program & Negotiations

AFP: "A system has been reached in talks between Iran and major powers towards a nuclear deal that will give the UN atomic watchdog access to all suspect sites, a senior US official said Monday. 'The entry point isn't we must be able to get into every military site, because the United States of America wouldn't allow anybody to get into every military site, so that's not appropriate,' the official said. 'But if in the context of agreement... the IAEA believes it needs access and has a reason for that access then we have a process that access is given,' the official said on condition of anonymity. 'We have worked out a process that we believe will ensure that the IAEA has the access it needs.'" http://t.uani.com/1LFE32I

Reuters: "Iran and six world powers ramped up negotiations on Tuesday after accepting they would miss a June 30 deadline for a nuclear deal, with both sides cautioning that major obstacles to a lasting agreement remained. Diplomats said the Vienna talks would run on for as long as necessary to reach a deal... 'There are real and tough issues that remain which have to be resolved in order to get the comprehensive agreement, and we still do not know yet whether we will be able to get there,' a senior U.S. administration official told reporters. Zarif flew in on Tuesday morning with Iran's nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi, still recovering from major surgery in May, and immediately went into almost two hours of private discussions with Kerry. 'I am here to get a final deal, and I think we can,' he told reporters." http://t.uani.com/1g6x31O

AP: "Iran's chief diplomat insisted Tuesday he had a mandate to finalize a nuclear agreement despite increased signs of backtracking by his country's supreme leader, as talks with world powers were set to blow past Tuesday's self-imposed deadline without a deal. Returning to the negotiations in Vienna, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said the diplomacy had reached a 'very sensitive stage' but that progress was possible. Asked by a reporter about his meetings at home, he said: 'I already had a mandate to negotiate and I am here to get a final deal and I think we can.' He then continued his discussions with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry." http://t.uani.com/1JupPkK

Reuters: "The United States on Monday rejected criticism that world powers negotiating a nuclear agreement with Iran have been making too many compromises, saying it hoped to get a good deal but was not certain that was achievable... The U.S. official was asked to respond to public criticism of the U.S. delegation in the talks and suggestions that the administration of President Barack Obama had been making too many concessions out of desperation to do a deal. 'We still do not know yet whether we will be able to get there,' he said. 'We want to, we hope to, but we do not know.' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday accused the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China of retreating from tough positions in the talks. 'We see before our very eyes a stark retreat from the red lines that the world powers set themselves only recently, and publicly,' he said. 'There is no reason to hasten into signing this bad deal, which is getting worse by the day.' The U.S. official said the United States would not have spent endless time on negotiations just to give in at the end. 'It's really absurd,' the official said. 'If we were going to cave, I could be home already and I would be a really happy person ... we would have done that a long time ago,' the official said. 'Why would we be spending the hours doing this in the way we are if, you know, we were just (going to say to Iran) well whatever you want, you got.'" http://t.uani.com/1T0TmnD

AP: "World powers and Iran prepared to move past Tuesday's deadline for a comprehensive nuclear agreement, with officials suggesting significant backtracking by Tehran's negotiators that may need several more days of discussions to resolve... Several signs pointed toward Iranian intransigence and perhaps even backsliding on a framework it reached with world powers three months ago. At a briefing for some three dozen, mainly American, reporters, a senior U.S. official repeated several times that the final package must be based on the April parameters - 'period.'" http://t.uani.com/1KqGmWU

AP: "The Iranian nuclear talks are playing out in classic fashion: A self-imposed deadline appears to have been extended due to stubborn disputes, with the sides publicly sticking to positions and facing internal pressure from opponents ready to pounce on any compromise. Should the talks actually collapse, the alternatives are not appealing. The war option that the United States has kept on the table has few fans, and the world community does not seem willing to impose truly crippling sanctions. A dangerous period of uncertainty looms. Which way it goes may depend on which side needs a deal the most. Iran might seem the weaker party, with sanctions harming its economy. But its authoritarian regime puts up a convincingly brave front, and the Obama Administration, with its legacy on the line, seems at least as determined to conclude a deal." http://t.uani.com/1U3RPPh

Politico: "As he meets with Iranian officials in search of a nuclear deal in the coming days, John Kerry may sense another presence in Vienna's Palais Coburg hotel: his legacy. Over his 30-year political career, Kerry has long been knocked for delivering more talk than results. Achieving a nuclear deal he first began pursuing even before he became secretary of state could redefine his place in history. And that, Republican critics, foreign officials, and even some ex-administration officials say, is a big problem. Kerry's eagerness for a deal, they argue, risks that the Iranians will seduce him into a bad one. 'I don't know how anyone who has observed Kerry over the past two years would think differently,' says a former administration official who worked on Iran issues... Dennis Ross, another former senior Middle East aide under Obama with long experience in diplomatic negotiations said the key to effective deal making is 'being able to show you have a genuine interest in a deal but can live without one.'" http://t.uani.com/1Hs7W3E

JTA: "In nuclear talks between Iran and the major powers, it's deadline time, and skeptics on both sides are laying out red lines in a bid to shape a final deal. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader who had been wary of the talks, last week outlined his own expectations for the deal - and where there would be no compromise. On the American side, a five-point memo circulated by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee has been influential in shaping how Congress and others are pressing the Obama administration... Khamenei's June 23 broadside to Iranian government officials and AIPAC's memo, 'Five Requirements for a Good Deal,' circulating for about a month, are being treated by experts on the talks as baselines for must-convince skeptics in both countries: the religious establishment in Iran and Congress in the United States. Under legislation passed in May, Congress gets an up or down vote on a deal... Congressional insiders say the AIPAC memo features prominently in conversations lawmakers from both parties are having with administration officials. It has also influenced other American groups seeking a say in the process. A letter last week organized by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy setting out concerns about the emerging deal and signed by 18 former government officials has a similar five-point format." http://t.uani.com/1egqb0B

Sanctions Relief

Reuters: "Asian imports of Iranian crude rose to the highest level this year in May, although buyers may have to curb any further increases if negotiators up against a deadline fail to reach a final deal on Tehran's disputed nuclear programme... Imports by Iran's four biggest buyers - China, India, Japan and South Korea - totalled 1.2 million bpd last month, down 1.9 percent from a year ago and the highest since 1.21 million bpd in December, government and tanker-tracking data showed... India's imports of Iranian crude oil rose 66 percent from a year earlier in to their highest level since March 2014." http://t.uani.com/1BTMJPv

Reuters: "India has asked refiners that owe about $6.5 billion to Iran for oil imports to build up dollar and euro balances to avoid downward pressure on the rupee if six world powers and Tehran reach a final nuclear deal. Local refiners still owe Iran about 55 percent of the bill for crude bought since February 2013, when a route to pay for Iranian oil through Turkey's Halkbank was stopped under pressure from U.S. and European sanctions... Once an agreement is reached, Iran would likely ask for payment of its oil dues, India's oil ministry said in a June 11 letter to refiners that was seen by Reuters." http://t.uani.com/1GWIaDe

Human Rights

CBS: "Kerry and President Obama are keen to see the deal finalized as a major credit to the administration's foreign policy credentials, but as CBS News correspondent Margaret Brennan reports, no one has a more personal stake in the negotiations than the four Americans currently imprisoned or missing in Iran. With the U.S. and Iran talking for the first time in more than 30 years, their families believe that this is the best chance to bring their loved ones home, and they've come to Vienna to lobby for their release. For Sara Hekmati, a breakthrough in Vienna isn't a landmark nuclear accord with Iran -- it's getting her 31-year-old brother out of one of the country's most notorious prisons... U.S. officials say that at every meeting with the Iranians, they implore them to release these Americans but, so far, that has not been enough to bring them home." http://t.uani.com/1LzXglq

IHR: "According to official reports, Iranian authorities carried out two amputation sentences in the Central Prison of Mashhad on Sunday (during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan). One of the prisoners was identified by Khorassan newspaper as M.A., 26 years old, accused of theft by breaking into a residential home and stealing money... The other prisoner, reportedly charged with ten counts of theft, was transferred to the Central Prison of Mashhad for the execution of his sentence.'" http://t.uani.com/1R1BOKA

Foreign Affairs

Reuters: "France has asked its firms to prepare a return to Iran ahead of a likely deal with powers to curb Tehran's nuclear program, but Paris' tough stance in talks and ties with Sunni Arab states means its 'love-hate' relationship with Iran will continue... 'Everyone is looking at Iran with greed,' said a senior French official. 'It's an important market, but it's not the only one. There was a strategic decision to be made on who could face Iran as it pushes its pawns in the region. That's Saudi Arabia and Egypt. That's the choice we've made.'" http://t.uani.com/1R1ypvd

Opinion & Analysis

UANI Advisory Board Member Michael Singh in WSJ: "With reports suggesting that the June 30 deadline for a deal on Iran's nuclear will be missed, just as previous negotiating deadlines were, we're on the brink of not an end but a new phase in this diplomatic saga. After July 9, the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act-which President Barack Obama signed into law last month-mandates that Congress gets an additional 30 days to review the accord, or 60 total. During this period, the president would not be permitted to extend Iran any sanctions relief beyond that stipulated by the November 2013 Joint Plan of Action. By the standards of the Middle East today, two months is an eternity-and the Obama administration is surely wary of leaving an accord in diplomatic limbo for that long. Such a period would give Iranian opponents of a deal time to appeal to Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei; give time for events in Syria, Iraq, or elsewhere to disrupt diplomacy; and/or allow critics in the U.S. to organize opposition to an agreement. Such fears could tempt negotiators on both sides to consider a diplomatic gambit that would lock the accord in place before Congress has its say. Per the framework parameters the U.S. announced April 2, the U.N. Security Council resolutions penalizing Iran for its nuclear activities will be replaced as part of a final deal. This new resolution would formally endorse the agreement and establish mechanisms such as a new International Atomic Energy Agency inspection regime and a 'procurement channel' governing Iranian imports of sensitive technology. It would also re-impose sanctions on 'conventional arms and ballistic missiles, as well as provisions that allow for related cargo inspections and asset freezes.' Taking such action at the U.N. before or during the congressional review period could, however, render Congress moot. Even if lawmakers disapproved of the deal, it will have been granted legitimacy by the U.N. Security Council's action and international sanctions against Iran will have been lifted. Other countries would judge that they had sufficient basis to proceed according to the deal's provisions with or without U.S. participation, though some might hesitate if the administration declared its intention to abide by Congress's decision and continue enforcing U.S. sanctions. Whatever the administration's preference, the president signed the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act into law; accordingly, he should not cast a vote at the Security Council until Congress has had its chance to weigh in... All this means that the best course of action for the U.S. and its European allies would be to present Iran with a take-it-or-leave-it offer, walk away without committing to renew negotiations, and continue unilaterally adhering to the Joint Plan's limits, as long as the Iranians do likewise. At the same time, Washington should visibly prepare its backup options-new and resumed sanctions or even a military strike-in coordination with allies to convey to Tehran that the status quo can only deteriorate, not improve, should its intransigence continue." http://t.uani.com/1RPO5wW

Ahmad El-Assaad in WSJ: "Ever since it entered the Syrian civil war, the Iranian-funded Lebanese-Shiite terror outfit Hezbollah has suffered tremendously and in many different ways. Over the past two years, more than 1,000 Hezbollah fighters have died in that war, and the Lebanese people's resentment toward the group has increased. Lebanese Shiites who don't belong to Hezbollah have also been targeted for scorn by the rest of the country, even though many of us oppose its vicious ways. Long gone are the days when a large portion of the Lebanese population believed that Hezbollah is there to protect them and Lebanon. The mask has fallen off. Most Lebanese now see Hezbollah for what it is: a militia that works for the Iranian regime and must therefore obey Tehran's orders. And to quiet the disenchanted voices, to make them dare not speak out, especially in the Shiite areas, Hezbollah has become more oppressive than ever. The war in Syria has been a big financial burden on Hezbollah as well. The cash coming from Tehran is not what it used to be. In many Shiite neighborhoods, Hezbollah is asking people for donations. This has weakened the image of Hezbollah, as people see that its coffers are no longer filled as they once were. Most young men join Hezbollah not because they believe in its talk about 'resistance,' but simply because it's the only option for the poor, unemployed and uneducated Shiites to earn a few hundred dollars a month. The source of Hezbollah's financial troubles is obvious: The Iranian regime has spent exorbitant sums trying to support and sustain the Assad regime in Damascus. With a population of approximately 80 million, Iran's gross domestic product is only $369 billion. The United Arab Emirates, by comparison, with a population of nine million, has a GDP of $402 billion. Yet despite its penurious position, Iran continues to ignore its domestic and social problems. Instead, just like the old Soviet Union, it is stretching its influence throughout the Middle East as if it were an economic powerhouse, not an economic disaster. Furthermore, Tehran views Hezbollah's results over the past 33 years as such a success that it is now franchising it. From Hamas in the Palestinian territories to the Sadrists in Iraq to the Houthis in Yemen, these proxy terrorist organizations are an exact replica of Hezbollah. Now the Obama administration is negotiating a flawed nuclear deal with the Iranian regime that will see Tehran get a windfall of up to $150 billion. With so much cash on hand, Tehran would surely create new Hezbollah franchises elsewhere in the Middle East and order all these radical proxy groups to wage even more wars in the region. At the very least, Tehran would be eager to give a good boost to its pride and joy-Hezbollah-and help it buy its way out of the problems it is facing in Lebanon now. I recently met in Washington D.C. with senators, members of Congress and think-tank analysts. When I shared my worries with those close to the Obama administration, the response was, 'Let's get a deal now on the nuclear issue and then we'll work out a plan on how to stand up to this Iranian invasion of the Middle East.' When I pressed them further on the matter, I got no answers... It has become clear to me that there is no plan. At best, if there will ever be a plan, it will be as successful as the one we see unfolding today against Islamic State. There is no doubt that a nuclear deal with Iran would be a nightmare for my beloved Lebanon and for all the other countries in the Middle East that are controlled, or could be controlled, by Iranian proxy groups... To those who say that this nuclear deal is a recipe for peace, I say that this deal is an invitation for more wars in the Middle East." http://t.uani.com/1Ns7Slh

Rep. Ted Deutch (D-FL) in the Sun Sentinel: "The objective of the United States in the P5+1 negotiations with Iran is not to reach an agreement by June 30; it is to reach an agreement that verifiably prevents Iran from ever developing nuclear weapons capability. When negotiators announced that they had arrived at a framework for a deal back in April, we were told that the purpose of the next June 30th deadline was to have a timeline for working out the mere 'technical details' that remained. What we have learned since then, however, is that the unresolved issues are not small technical details but actually matters of great consequence. Chief among them is the possibility, recently floated by Secretary John Kerry, of a final deal that fails to require the Iranian regime to fully disclose the possible military dimensions (PMD) of its nuclear program. Failing to require such transparency from Iran would undermine the enforceability of any deal. That's because the weapons inspectors who will be charged with monitoring Iran's compliance with an agreement are the same weapons inspectors that Iran has blatantly ignored, obstructed, and disrespected for the past decade. For years, weapons inspectors at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) have documented Iran's repeated violations of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, from building an illicit underground nuclear procurement network to conducting warhead research in secret facilities. Indeed, it was the IAEA's referral of Iran to the U.N. Security Council in 2006 that spurred the passage of numerous resolutions calling for Iran to suspend enrichment and give inspectors greater access to Iran's nuclear facilities, scientists, and suspected military sites. And since Iran entered into an agreement with the IAEA to resolve outstanding concerns in November 2013, the regime has continued to stonewall the efforts of inspectors to determine the extent of Iran's nuclear weapons program... After years of calling for compliance with the IAEA, for the United States and our P5+1 partners to adopt an agreement that allows Iran to retain a nuclear enrichment program without first answering for its past behavior, sends the regime the dangerous message that ignoring the IAEA has no repercussions. We cannot have confidence in a deal that provides Iran, the world's number one state sponsor of terror, with access to over $100 billion in frozen assets without demanding it recognize the authority of international weapons inspectors charged with verifying Iran's satisfaction of what must be an extensive set of preconditions to sanctions relief.  Given Iran's long history of deception, there is no accountability without robust transparency... We hope that diplomacy with Iran succeeds. Yet giving Iran a pass on these issues from the beginning not only neuters the IAEA, but undermines our chances of reaching any deal that could be worthy of support. With so many nations around the world invested in a diplomatic solution that prevents Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, there is no value in meeting a deadline if the majority in Congress views it as a bad deal. As Senator Bob Corker recently said to Secretary of State John Kerry, 'If it takes longer to get the right deal, take longer, please.' The Senator is right. Our ability to maintain intense economic pressure on Iran gives us no reason to stop negotiating until we are satisfied that all paths to nuclear weapons capability are cut off. That means a deal that empowers instead of delegitimizes the IAEA." http://t.uani.com/1GK3Xuv

Sen. Tom Cotton (R-TX) in the Washington Examiner: "We are on the cusp of the latest deadline for a final agreement over Iran's nuclear weapons program. In the next few days, we may see a signed deal that reflects the framework announced by the Obama administration and Iranian negotiators back in April. It is an emerging agreement that almost no one, including former advisers to President Obama, believes would be a strong deal that sufficiently advances U.S. interests and bolsters our national security. Indeed, the ayatollahs would have good reason to celebrate. They will likely be able to trumpet an internationally recognized right to enrich nuclear material, Iran's reentry into the global economy, the right to maintain a hardened underground research facility, the ability to stiff-arm international inspections and a 10 to 15-year glide path toward an unfettered nuclear program. Such a deal would satisfy the ayatollahs' dual strategic goals of eliminating the international sanctions regime that has hampered Iran's economy and maintaining nuclear weapons breakout capability. The achievement of both goals would significantly enhance Iran's regional influence, insulate it from outside pressure and more deeply entrench the revolutionary regime of the ayatollahs... The core reasons the U.S. has long sought the dismantlement of Iran's nuclear weapons program are simple. First, a theocratic revolutionary regime that is the top state sponsor of terrorism would pose an unacceptable risk should it obtain nuclear weapons capability. Iran's ayatollahs have already been killing Americans for more than three decades. They are the lead financier and arms supplier of Hamas, Hezbollah and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, terrorist organizations dedicated to destroying Israel, and they've murdered Jews around the world. If Iran commits these crimes against the West now, imagine what Iran would do with a nuclear umbrella. Second, if Shiite Iran possesses breakout capability, its Sunni Arab rivals will also seek to obtain it, sparking a cascade of proliferation across the region. The Middle East is turbulent, with intersecting tensions and high probabilities for military miscalculation. Turning the region into a nuclear tinderbox could portend global catastrophe. It is difficult to see how either of these outcomes would be foreclosed by the agreement likely to be signed by the Obama administration. The pending accord would not deny Iran nuclear weapons capability. Instead - and by design - it affords Iran that capability and only seeks to persuade the ayatollahs not to order the actual construction of a nuclear weapon. This is folly. Allowing Iran to keep a significant nuclear infrastructure will enable the regime to continue research on advanced centrifuge technology and shorten the time it will take to make a dash for nuclear breakout. And Iran may use the veneer of a legitimized supply chain to mask illicit work on nuclear weapons... To prevent the nuclearization of the Mideast, we need an agreement that verifiably denies Iran nuclear weapons capability. Administration officials may deride this position as a 'pie-in-the-sky' proposal that the Iranians will never accept. But this obscures the fact that it had been the consensus U.S. position for years until the Obama administration backed away from it in the current negotiations... But it is not too late to reverse course. President Obama has said on numerous occasions that no deal is better than a bad deal. And make no mistake: The deal currently envisioned is a bad deal. That is not only my opinion. A consensus is building among national security experts - including former inner-circle advisers to President Obama on Iran - that the pending accord gives away the store to the Iranians. The president should take his own counsel regarding a bad deal. He should continue talks past tomorrow's artificial deadline for however long it takes to eliminate Iran's nuclear weapons capability. That would be a strategic gain for which lifting sanctions would be justified. Failing that, the president should cite Iranian intransigence, break off talks, reinstate the full spectrum of economic sanctions and fortify the credible threat of military force. What the ayatollahs respect is strength. And this is a moment - perhaps more than any other time of his presidency - for President Obama to be strong." http://t.uani.com/1T10noF
         

Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Eye on Iran is not intended as a comprehensive media clips summary but rather a selection of media elements with discreet analysis in a PDA friendly format. For more information please email Press@UnitedAgainstNuclearIran.com

United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) is a non-partisan, broad-based coalition that is united in a commitment to prevent Iran from fulfilling its ambition to become a regional super-power possessing nuclear weapons.  UANI is an issue-based coalition in which each coalition member will have its own interests as well as the collective goal of advancing an Iran free of nuclear weapons.

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