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NUKEWARS
In departure from Republicans, Trump wouldn't 'rip up' Iran deal
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Aug 16, 2015


Russia and Iran foreign ministers to meet on nuclear deal, Syria
Moscow (AFP) Aug 15, 2015 - Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will host his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif on Monday to discuss the deal on Tehran's nuclear programme and the conflict in Syria.

"The visit is taking place in the context of an increasingly active Russian-Iranian dialogue of late that reflects the high level of mutual understanding between Moscow and Tehran," Russia's foreign ministry said in a statement Saturday.

The two countries are on increasingly good terms and Russia helped steer through the landmark July agreement with world powers over Iran's nuclear programme.

Moscow is hoping that its firms can benefit from the nuclear deal, which should see economic sanctions lifted on Tehran.

Russia -- which along with Iran is one of the few remaining backers of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad -- has also launched a fresh diplomatic push to find a way out of Syria's four-year civil war that has cost some 240,000 lives.

A flurry of diplomacy saw the foreign minister of Saudi Arabia hold talks with Lavrov in Moscow this week, along with representatives of the Syrian opposition.

Russia wants a broader grouping to cooperate in the fight against the Islamic State jihadists that have seized swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria, expanding from a US-led coalition to include the Syrian government and its allies.

US Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump took a strong departure from his party's rejection of the Iran nuclear deal, saying he would not necessarily "rip up" the accord, in an interview aired Sunday.

"I would police that contract so tough that they don't have a chance," the bombastic real estate mogul said in an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press," adding "it's very hard to say we're ripping up" the deal.

Several of Trump's fellow Republican contenders have publicly opposed the deal, with some vowing to abolish it if elected.

The Republican-controlled US Congress is expected in September to vote against the deal, a landmark agreement that would roll back Iran's nuclear program in exchange for an easing of crippling economic sanctions.

But the Republicans are unlikely to have enough support to overturn a subsequent veto by President Barack Obama.

Trump made the comments even as he sounded a dismal note on the deal's eventual outcome and called US Secretary of State John Kerry, who worked to negotiate it, incompetent.

"Iran is going to be unbelievably powerful and unbelievably rich and Israel is in big trouble," Trump said.

"They are going to be such a wealthy, such a powerful nation, they're going to have nuclear weapons. They are going to take over parts of the world that you wouldn't believe and I think it's going to lead to nuclear holocaust," Trump said.

"The people that negotiated that deal, namely Kerry and his friends, are incompetent," he said.

The billionaire businessman added that as an entrepreneur, however, he was "good at looking at a contract and finding things in a contract even though they're bad."

"I've heard a lot of people say 'We're going to rip up the deal.' It's very tough to do when you say 'rip up a deal' because I'm a deal person," Trump said.

The money that could become available to Iran with the easing of sanctions could be as much as $150 billion, US media has reported.

Asked specifically whether he would keep the deal alive as president, Trump responded: "The problem is by the time I got in there, they will have already received the $150 billion."


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NUKEWARS
Fears US 'national interest' hurt by partisan Iran row
Washington (AFP) Aug 13, 2015
The former White House official who resigned this week as head of a key US group lobbying against the Iran nuclear deal, warned Wednesday that the partisan row was hurting America's national interest. Gary Samore, who stepped down as president of United Against Nuclear Iran because he supports the agreement, said a political battle between Congress and the White House had crowded out the "pr ... read more


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