Former Vice President Dick Cheney said Tuesday that President
Barack Obama is responsible for directly equipping Iran with the capability to
destroy the United States, calling the negotiated nuclear deal
"madness."
A few hours
later, the deal got the support of three more Democrats in the Senate, ensuring
President Obama has the support to carry forward with the deal despite majority
opposition from Republicans and some Democrats in Congress.
In the fiery
speech delivered at the American Enterprise Institute, the Republican security
hawk unleashed an aggressive attack against the Iran deal, which Congress will
begin debating this week. Though congressional Republicans will likely not have
enough votes to thwart the White House's nuclear agreement with Iran, Cheney
will present his case against the accord.
"This
agreement will give Iran the means to launch a nuclear attack on the U.S.
homeland," Cheney said. "I know of no nation in history that has
agreed to guarantee that the means of its own destruction will be in the hands
of another nation, particularly one that is hostile."
A protestor
interrupted Cheney's speech highlighting his role in war in the Middle East.
She got into a tug of war with a man in the audience over her flag before being
removed from the room.
"My
generation wants to try diplomacy. My generation wants diplomacy and peace, not
war. No more war mongering. Dick Cheney is a war criminal. We should not be
listening to him. We want peace," she said.
The White House
pre-empted the speech Tuesday morning, posting a compilation of Cheney
struggling through interviews on the Iraq War over the past dozen years and
hitting on one spot on Fox News from last week, when Juan Williams asked Cheney
why Americans should trust him on Iran after he was wrong on Iraq.
"Because I
was right about Iraq," Cheney says, as
the video freezes and zooms in on him. It then ticks through a
series of interviews, starting from a 2003 spot on "Meet the Press"
when he told Tim Russert: "I really do believe we will be greeted as
liberators."
Cheney, one of
the GOP's leading military hawks and one of the architects of President George
W. Bush's invasion of Iraq, has not been shy about engaging on national
security issues after the Bush administration concluded. And the former
secretary of Defense is now making an extended return to the fray as he
promotes his new book, "Exceptional: Why the World Needs a Powerful
America."
But his speech
was also timed to offer what aims to be a full-spectrum criticism of the deal.
The agreement hatched in part by John Kerry in Vienna earlier this summer lifts
the West's sanctions on Iran in return for a regular schedule of inspections
and assurances that the nation's nuclear program will not be used to build a
weapon.
Cheney is
unconvinced, saying that the deal will speed other nations' desire for nuclear
arsenals, embolden Iranian forces set on "regional domination" and
allow Iranians to cheat on inspections as they have in the past.
"If you're
looking for a quick summary of Secretary Kerry's position on the need for Iran
to completely disclose all its past nuclear activity, let's just say he was for
it before he was against it," Cheney said, recalling Kerry's tortured
explanation of his position on the most recent Iraq War.
Despite
extensive lobbying by pro-Israel groups and unified Republican opposition to
the deal, the GOP Congress almost certainly will not have the votes to override
an Obama veto of Capitol Hill's resolution of disapproval. Republican
presidential candidates Donald Trump and Ted Cruz are scheduled to hold a rally
on the steps of the Capitol on Wednesday to galvanize opposition to the deal,
but the bigger question is whether Obama's allies will be able to stop that
vote of disapproval from taking place at all.
Cheney is
holding out hope for "a better deal."
"Arming and
funding Iran while simultaneously providing them a pathway to a nuclear arsenal
is not an act of peace," he said. "It's not, as President Obama
claims, the only alternative to war. It is madness."
During a
question-and-answer session following the remarks, Cheney said the U.S. needs
to be aggressive in toppling ISIS opposed to containing the group.
"I don't
see anyway to contain ISIS. It seems to be that they are working very
aggressively to recruit and grow in size including recruit people out of the
United States," he said. "I think they've already made remarkable
progress."
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