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This Article is From Dec 12, 2013

US Congress to hold off on Iran sanctions for now

US Congress to hold off on Iran sanctions for now
File photo of US Secretary of State John Kerry.
Washington: The U.S. Congress is not expected to approve new sanctions against Iran until January at the earliest, giving President Barack Obama at least a few more weeks before his short-term nuclear agreement with the Middle Eastern power could face added complications.

The U.S. and other world powers reached an agreement with Iran last month that provides Iran with $7 billion in relief from U.S. economic penalties in exchange for a series of nuclear concessions.

The Obama administration also committed to no new nuclear-related penalties for six months - a promise that upset members of both parties in Congress.

Legislative aides said the Republican majority leader in the House of Representatives, Eric Cantor, could introduce a nonbinding resolution as early as Thursday spelling out suggested terms for any final deal.

However, it would fall short of introducing new penalties.

Separately, Senate aides reported that Democratic Majority Leader Harry Reid was talking about possible votes in January.

His intent, they said, was to ensure the issue does not interfere with passage of a defense bill before senators break next week for Christmas.

The aides spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to publicly discuss the legislative maneuvering.

Secretary of State John Kerry and Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew met with much of the Senate in private on Wednesday in a renewed effort to hold on any legislation that might scuttle the nuclear deal.

Kerry told the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Tuesday that even if lawmakers suspended fresh penalties on condition that Iran didn't violate its commitments, those sanctions would be a sign of bad faith to America's negotiating partners and could provide Tehran with an excuse to walk away from negotiations.

Obama and Kerry say a final deal next year is uncertain, but stress that diplomacy is far preferable to any military solution.

Iran insists its nuclear program is solely designed for peaceful energy generation and medical research purposes.

The U.S. and several other countries long have viewed the program as a covert attempt by Iran to develop nuclear weapons capability.

Sens. Bob Menendez, a Democrat, and Mark Kirk, a Republican, are close to completing a bill that would require that the administration certify every 30 days Iran's adherence to the interim pact, according to legislative aides.

Without that certification, the legislation would reimpose all penalties and introduce new restrictions on Iran's engineering, mining and construction industries.

The legislation also calls for a global boycott of Iranian oil by 2015 if Iran fails to live up to the interim agreement.

Foreign companies and banks violating the bans would be barred from doing business in the United States.

Menendez declined to comment on his plans, but said he would listen to Kerry's presentation.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a Republican, said he would be open to allowing this year's defense bill to pass without including new sanctions, if he could get a guarantee that the topic would come up soon.

"That will go a long way to shape my thinking," Graham said.

Sen. Bob Corker, a Republican, is pushing his own bill. It doesn't seek to ramp up sanctions but looks to lock in those already in place until Iran completely halts all uranium enrichment activity - a demand U.S. officials long ago conceded.

"My concern is that the administration in another, quote, trust-building measure, will alleviate some more sanctions for another baby step which really doesn't accomplish anything relative to dismantling the enrichment programs," Corker told reporters.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has said any new commercial restrictions against Iran could kill the diplomatic effort.

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