National security adviser Susan Rice on Wednesday acknowledged the
existence of side agreements between Iran and the International Atomic
Energy Agency.
Rice said the deals involve Iran accounting for
past military uses of its nuclear program, but rejected GOP assertions
that this represented “secret” side deals to the Iranian nuclear
agreement.
Rice
said the documents between Iran and the IAEA are not public, but that
the administration has been informed of their contents and will share
details with members of Congress in a classified briefing on Capitol
Hill.
“We’re satisfied with them and we will share the
contents of those briefings in full in a classified session with the
Congress,” she told reporters. “So there's nothing in that regard that
we know that they won't know.”
Republicans have been demanding to
see the Iran-IAEA agreements and have criticized the administration for
not yet making them public.
“That we are only now discovering that
parts of this dangerous agreement are being kept secret begs the
question of what other elements may also be secret and entirely free
from public scrutiny,” Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) said in a statement.
Congress
is reviewing the Iran nuclear deal, which lifts sanctions on Tehran in
exchange for its concessions on its nuclear program.
President
Obama has hailed the deal as a major win for the United States that will
keep Tehran from getting nuclear weapons and make the Middle East more
safe. Critics argue it does too little to prevent Iranian aggression and
that it could leave Israel open to an attack.
The talk of secret
side deals could hurt administration efforts to defeat legislation
aimed at undermining the deal. Rice took aim at the comments.
She
said it was “no secret” that Iran and the IAEA were negotiating an
agreement on possible military-related nuclear activities.
She said this had always “been an issue between Iran and the IAEA” and was a sticking point in the talks.
Obama’s top national security adviser said all components of the deal the U.S. negotiated have been shared with Congress.
Besides
agreeing to discuss the past military dimensions of its nuclear
program, Iran struck a deal with the IAEA on inspections at the Parchin
military base, one of the most sensitive sites discussed in the U.S.-led
international talks.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman
Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) and ranking member Ben Cardin (D-Md.) wrote a
letter to Secretary of State John Kerry requesting that documents
related to the deals be submitted to Congress.
Lawmakers have 60 days to review the agreement before voting whether to approve or reject the Iran deal.
Kerry,
along with Treasury Secretary Jack Lew and Energy Secretary Ernest
Moniz, were on Capitol Hill Wednesday to hold classified briefings for
members.
http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/248856-white-house-acknowledges-side-deals-between-iran-iaea
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