US President Barack Obama has threatened to veto legislation that would allow Congress to review any agreement with Iran over its nuclear program.
"The
president has been clear that now is not the time for Congress to pass
additional legislation on Iran," US National Security Council spokeswoman
Bernadette Meehan told the Washington-based newspaper The Hill on Saturday.
"If
this bill is sent to the President, he will veto it. We are in the final weeks
of an international negotiation. We should give our negotiators the best chance
of success, rather than complicating their efforts," she added.
The
White House's comments came hours after some hawkish senators introduced a bill
requiring Obama to submit the text of any nuclear deal with Iran to
Congress for review. The legislation would also ban the White House from
lifting any sanctions for a period of 60 days so that Congress could hold
hearings and debate the deal.
The
measure dubbed as the "Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015" was
introduced on Friday by Senators Bob Corker, Robert Menendez, Lindsey Graham
and Tim Kaine.
Senators
John McCain, Joe Donnelly, Marco Rubio, Heidi Heitkamp, Kelly Ayotte, Bill
Nelson, Jim Risch, and Angus King co-sponsored the bill. It
is not yet known when the bill would come to a vote in the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee. The legislation is seen as a challenge to Obama’s
authority over a possible nuclear agreement with Tehran.
Nuclear
talks between representatives from Iran and the United States started on
February 22 in the Swiss city of Geneva and the two sides held three rounds of
talks in two days in an attempt to narrow differences ahead of a key July 1
deadline for reaching a comprehensive deal.
The
scale of Iran’s uranium enrichment and the timetable for the lifting of
anti-Iran sanctions are seen as major sticking points in the talks. Both
the Iranian and US diplomats said some progress was made toward a final
agreement. Sat Feb 28, 2015 9:4PM PTV.
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