White House issues new warning to Senate on Iran
"Let us complete the negotiations before the Congress acts on legislation," a top official says.
Nuclear talks resume »
White House warns Senate anew on Iran legislation
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"Instead, the legislation would potentially prevent any deal from succeeding by suggesting that Congress must vote to 'approve' any deal," McDonough said. He criticized a provision that would eliminate Obama's authority to lift some sanctions on Iran as part of any agreement.
The talks are to resume Sunday in Switzerland, with the U.S. and other world powers facing an end-of-March deadline to reach a framework deal.
"The administration's request to Congress is simple: Let us complete the negotiations before the Congress acts on legislation," McDonough said, adding that he does expect a robust congressional debate if a final deal is struck by the end of June.
McDonough reiterated Obama's repeated threats to veto the legislation should Congress pass it.
Corker and Senate colleagues in both parties insist that Congress be allowed to consider and vote on any agreement designed to block Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. Corker argued his case in a letter to Obama earlier this week, and did so again in response to McDonough.
"On this issue where Congress has played such a vital role, I believe it is very important that Congress appropriately weigh in before any final agreement is implemented," Corker said in a statement late Saturday.
Tensions between the administration and lawmakers over Iran have been rising for weeks.
McDonough's
letter follows one this past week that was signed by 47 Republican
senators and addressed to Iran's leaders warning that any nuclear
agreement with the U.S. could expire the day Obama leaves office. The
White House blasted the letter as a politically motivated attempt to
undermine the president's ability to conduct foreign policy and advance
U.S. national security interests.
The
Republican letter follows a controversial March 3 speech to a joint
meeting of Congress by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in
which he warned that the emerging nuclear agreement would all but
guarantee that Iran gets nuclear weapons. House Speaker John Boehner,
R-Ohio, invited the prime minister to speak without input from the White
House and State Department, in what the White House said was a
departure from protocol.
The Huffington Post first reported on McDonough's letter.
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