STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 5631 – Iran Accountability Act of 2016
(Rep. McCarthy, R-CA)
H.R. 4992 – United States Financial System Protection Act of 2016
(Rep. Royce, R-CA, and 14 cosponsors)
H.R. 5119 – No 2H2O from Iran Act
(Rep. Pompeo, R-KS, and 32 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes H.R. 5631, H.R. 4992, and H.R. 5119,
bills that would prevent the United States from implementing the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). These bills would undermine the
ability of the United States to meet our JCPOA commitments by reimposing
certain secondary economic and financial sanctions lifted on
"Implementation Day" of the JCPOA – the day on which the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) verified Iran's completion of key
nuclear-related steps. The JCPOA has significantly constrained Iran's
nuclear program, including through the dismantlement of key aspects of
the program, and subjects Iran's nuclear program to unprecedented
verification and monitoring requirements. It is profoundly in the
national security interest of the United States to continue to meet our
commitments under the JCPOA as long as Iran continues to meet its
commitments.
H.R.
5631 includes provisions that would prevent the Administration from
implementing certain U.S. sanctions relief commitments under the JCPOA
on the basis of non-nuclear related activity by Iran. Specifically, the
legislation would require the reimposition of sanctions on individuals
and entities delisted on Implementation Day, as well as the
re-imposition of financial and economic secondary sanctions lifted on
Implementation Day, including sanctions on prominent Iranian economic
sectors, such as the petrochemical sector. In addition, this bill lacks
flexibility including new waiver authorities as has typically been
provided for new robust sanctions measures for continued use of
sanctions in furtherance of our national security and foreign policy
objectives.
H.R.
4992 contravenes United States commitments in the JCPOA, as it would
reapply secondary sanctions on Iran's financial sector by prohibiting
permissible financial transactions between Iran and the international
community that are wholly outside the U.S. financial system. This would
amount to a harmful and unnecessary overreach, undermining the
President's exercise of International Emergency Economic Powers Act
(IEEPA) authority. As the Administration has been clear, the United
States will continue to impose our primary trade embargo on Iran, with
certain limited exceptions set forth in the JCPOA, and take robust
measures to protect the U.S. financial system from access by Iran.
However, this bill seeks to directly undermine Iran's conduct of banking
transactions outside of the United States – activity that became
permissible on Implementation Day in return for Iran meeting its
nuclear-related commitments, as verified by the IAEA.
H.R.
5119 includes provisions that would foreclose the United States from
procuring heavy water from Iran in the future. Removal of excess heavy
water from Iran denies Iran access to material that could be stockpiled
for potential nuclear weapons production while also providing the
international market access to an important commodity for research and
non-nuclear industries. As part of the JCPOA, Iran committed to a limit
on the amount of heavy water that it could accumulate, but may sell its
excess heavy water, further ensuring that Iran does not use this
product to develop material for a nuclear weapon. The United States
does not produce heavy water. For U.S. industry and research labs,
heavy water is a critical material used for biomedical and diagnostic
research – such as MRIs and pharmaceutical development – as well as for
chemistry, physics and environmental analysis.
These
bills, separately or collectively, thus would impact the continued
viability of the JCPOA, a diplomatic arrangement that peacefully and
verifiably prevents Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. Dismantling
the JCPOA would remove the unprecedented constraints on and monitoring
of Iran's nuclear program, lead to the unraveling of the international
sanctions regime against Iran, and deal a devastating blow to the
credibility of America's leadership and our commitments to our closest
allies.
As
we address our concerns with Iran's nuclear program through
implementation of the JCPOA, the Administration remains clear-eyed
regarding Iran's support for terrorism, its ballistic missile program,
human rights abuses, and destabilizing activity in the region. The
United States retains all of the tools it needs to counter this
activity, ranging from powerful sanctions to our efforts to disrupt and
interdict illicit shipments of weapons and proliferation-sensitive
technologies. In addition, the United States remains committed to
supporting our regional partners' enhancement of their defense
capabilities and will continue our steadfast vigilance in enforcing
multilateral export controls regimes, including the Missile Technology
Control Regime (MTCR).
Continued
implementation of JCPOA commitments by all participants – including the
United States and our closest allies – is critical to ensuring that
Iran's nuclear program is and will remain exclusively peaceful, which is
profoundly in the national security interest of the United States and
the international community.
The President has made it clear that he will veto any legislation that prevents the successful implementation of the JCPOA. If the President were presented with H.R. 4992, H.R. 5119, or H.R. 5631, he would veto these bills.
Source: Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget
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