Details On

The Deal

Facts on the Iran Deal

The nuclear deal with Iran will finance their radical regime, allowing them to continue sponsoring terrorism around the world. Iran can delay inspections of suspected nuclear sites for up to 24 days, which allows them time to hide any violations from the world. These concessions of the Iran Deal pave the way for Iran to obtain nuclear weapons.

Ballistic Missile Development

What they promised:

Added restrictions on Iran’s ballistic missile program.

What they got:

This deal rolls back existing restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program.

Inspections

What they promised:

“Anytime, anywhere” short-notice inspections.

What they got:

“Managed access,” a 24-day fundamentally flawed process, and Iran performing their own inspections.

Sanctions

What they promised:

The lifting of sanctions would be contingent on Iran demonstrating adherence to the agreement over time, and that US sanctions on Iran for terrorism, support for the regime of Bashar al-Assad in Syria, human rights abuses, and ballistic missiles will remain in place.

What they got:

This deal provides Iran a $150 billion signing bonus – funds which will be used to rejuvenate the regime’s terror proxies currently operating across 30 countries – and the administration will work to redefine non-nuclear sanctions as nuclear, so that it can lift them, including firms linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Uranium and Plutonium Pathways

What they promised:

Dismantlement of Iranian enriched uranium centrifuges and decommissioning of Iranian nuclear facilities.

What they got:

No dismantlement of Iranian enriched uranium centrifuges and no decommissioning of Iranian nuclear facilities. Instead, this deal allows Iran to improve its advanced centrifuges and retain its nuclear facilities.

Duration

What they promised:

A deal that would effectively block Iran’s main pathways to a bomb.

What they got:

Key constraints – such as restrictions on the number and type of centrifuges, the number of enrichment facilities Iran may construct, stockpiles of nuclear material, and development of advanced centrifuges– expire after 10-15 years, putting Iran on a trajectory toward a nuclear bomb.

Possible Military Dimensions

What they promised:

Iran must fully cooperate with and satisfy concerns of the IAEA over the possible military dimensions of its nuclear program in order to attain sanctions relief.

What they got:

A “Roadmap” that lacks enforcement mechanisms, fails to provide a baseline for verifying Iranian compliance, and relies on previous Iranian commitments that failed to detect hidden sites in the past – all while removing the intense pressure built by the sanctions regime.

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