Posted on Jul 14, 2015
LTC John Shaw
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Congrats! Let's assume that Congress will approve. Don't make your answer about domestic politics, but a chance for peace with Iran. The deal is done, what does this mean to the Iranian people?
http://www.wsj.com/articles/iran-world-powers-reach-nuclear-deal [login to see]
Edited 9 y ago
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Responses: 14
LTC Chief Of Readiness
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Probably nothing as long as they have a dictoator running the country.
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LTC John Shaw
LTC John Shaw
9 y
LTC (Join to see) Any thoughts on how the population thinks of it?
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LTC Chief Of Readiness
LTC (Join to see)
9 y
Sure, I think they all said "DEATH TO AMERICA!"
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CW3 Kevin Storm
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Two things come out of this: One I hope a better relations ship with the people of Iran, as I doubt the leadership will change their opinion of any time soon.

The other is a far worse scenario. Back during the Bush Administration UN Weapons Inspector Hans Blix said that Iran was years possibly a decade away from building a nuclear bomb. I thought Hans Blix is a fool, some of you may ask why. In my civilian life at that time I was had worked as a Weapons for Mass Destruction for EMS. I wnet around the country teaching first responders about treating patients exposed to certain agents. I have read worked with a lot of stuff, and have had the unique experience of being taught by some of the best people on this stuff. So lets look at some simple facts. In 1939 A. Einstein convinces then President Roosevelt to move forward with construction of the Atomic Bomb. These men did not have computers, they used slide rulers. Time to complte from scratch? Less than 5 years. The Nth Country Experiment, In 1964 Lawrence Livermore Laboratory took two new PHD physicists, and working alone without access to anying information develop a paper on building a bomb. It took them roughly three years. Granted there was no construction process involved, but again no computers involved, they developed, unknowingly a bomb that would have rivaled the one dropped on Hiroshima. A borderline failing student at Rutgers built a model bomb for and had it promptly taken away by the FBI. That was in the 1970's.

So my question is, with back door technology from China, North Korea, and Pakistan, does anyone actually believe our "friends" will abide by any of this?
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SGT Jeremiah B.
SGT Jeremiah B.
9 y
To be fair, with back door channels, this becomes the ONLY way forward. Those already exist. At least with the deal, Iran may have some motivation to not use them or at least be much sneakier (and thus slower) about it.
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COL Ted Mc
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LTC John Shaw - Colonel; Can I reserve my opinion at least until the actual text of the deal has been released and the US government approved it?

If the US government DOES NOT approve a deal which APPEARS (acting on insufficient information) to have given the US everything it could legitimately hope to achieve, then the result on the Iranian people is going to be a whole lot different that it will be if the US government DOES approve the deal.

At this stage, I'm not prepared to bet a dime on the deal being approved by the Republicans - after all, it wasn't negotiated by a Republican and it would be inconceivable for the Republicans to allow a Democrat to actually achieve anything in the year+ leading up to a Presidential Election.

PS, a "cost free" link that gives some of the details is

http://www.cnn.com/2015/07/14/politics/iran-nuclear-deal/
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LTC John Shaw
LTC John Shaw
9 y
COL Ted Mc The deal does not require Senate approval according to the Administration. It will be submitted to the UN security council regardless of Congressional approval.
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LTC John Shaw
LTC John Shaw
9 y
COL Ted Mc So much for Senate advise and consent...
This is treaty ratification turned on it's head, it goes through unless 2/3 vote to override a veto, against the agreement. See the link.

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2015/07/14/iran-nuclear-deal-how-congressional-review-will-work/
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COL Ted Mc
COL Ted Mc
9 y
LTC John Shaw - Colonel; it the sanctions are US based, then the US government has something to say about them (but, then again, so does every other country which is voluntarily complying with them).

However, if the sanctions are UN based the the UN is the "governing body" which has something to say about whether they remain in place or not. TRUE, the US government could enact its own (US based) sanctions (binding solely on Americans) against Iran and could THREATEN "retaliation" against any other country that had the gall to believe that their domestic law and international relations were more important to them and had greater legal effect in their own country than doing what they were told to do by the US government and US law.

Personally I don't think that that would be advisable since there are a sufficiency of countries which would tell the US government to screw off (as well as the financial clout to make it stick) which would further degrade the ability of the US government to influence world affairs.

PS - Since this "deal" is NOT (legally) a "treaty" then there is no need for Senate approval any more than there would have been for Senate approval for the acceptance of Germany's surrender at the end of WWII.

PPS - As long as the "deal" doesn't describe Iran's nuclear activities as "illegal" then Iran "wins" REGARDLESS of the terms of the "deal".

PPPS - Don't bet the rent that the Iranians haven't already prepared the media campaign for the first sign of anything that even looks like it could be confused with something that is similar to an action which resembles the government of the United States of America "backsliding" (or even threatening to backslide) on the deal.
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COL Ted Mc
COL Ted Mc
9 y
LTC John Shaw - Colonel; I note that the "Iran review legislation" passed by a vote of 98 to 1.

Since the vast majority (98.99%) of the Senators "approved" of the rules it's just a bit too late to start up but chants of "But it's not faaaaaaaaaaaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrRRR!"
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