US President Barack Obama shrugged off anti-US barbs and tweets from Iran’s supreme leader, calling Ayatollah Ali Khamenei “a politician” whose rhetoric will not threaten a deal to curb Iran’s nuclear program.
“Superpowers don’t respond to taunts,” Obama said in an interview on CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS that was set to air yesterday.
Obama added that he was “not interested in a Twitter back-and-forth with the supreme leader.”
Photo: Reuters
In defending his push for an Iran deal, Obama reiterated the arguments he has made for weeks: that the agreement will prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, and that rejecting it would present the US with only worse options, including another war.
“Nobody has presented a plausible alternative, other than military strikes, to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon,” Obama said.
The interview, which was taped on Thursday before Obama left Washington for a 17-day vacation on Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, is part of a media blitz to rally support for the deal.
After returning to the US capital, Obama will face a crucial congressional vote on the agreement, which the US and five world powers negotiated with Iran and agreed to on July 14.
Pro-Israel groups like the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) are waging a multimillion-dollar campaign to convince lawmakers — particularly Democrats — to reject the deal. They won a significant victory on Thursday when US Senator Charles Schumer, who is poised to become the Senate’s next Democratic leader, came out publicly against the deal.
“The very real risk that Iran will not moderate and will, instead, use the agreement to pursue its nefarious goals is too great,” Schumer said in a statement on Thursday.
How many Democrats will follow Schumer’s lead is unclear. The majority of Republicans in Congress, including House Speaker John Boehner and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, have denounced the deal.
Television commercials blasting the agreement as “a bad deal” are running in more than 35 states, said Patrick Thornton, a spokesman for Citizens for a Nuclear-Free Iran, a group backed by AIPAC.
“We think the proposed deal will ignite a nuclear arms race in the Middle East,” Thornton said in a telephone interview. “Democrats should be especially concerned about rewarding an Iranian regime that represses its own people.”
The White House has worked hard to counter critics of the agreement, including by inviting journalists to the White House and defending the deal last month on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.
In the interview with CNN, Obama reiterated his accusation that Republicans opposing the deal “have a lot in common” with Iranian hardliners.
Obama told CNN that public opposition to the deal is linked to anti-US statements from Khamenei and Iranian hardliners — including chants of “Death to America.”
In a Twitter post last month from his English-language account, Khamenei included an image that appeared to portray Obama with a gun to his head.
Asked about the post, Obama said he would not take the bait and respond to “taunts.”
“There’s always a gap between rhetoric and action,” Obama said. “And, you know, the supreme leader is a politician, apparently, just like everybody else.”
Obama also said the economic sanctions relief Iran stands to obtain under the deal is “not a game-changer” for security in the Middle East. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who opposes the deal, has not come up with a better alternative, Obama said.
Lawmakers have until the end of the day on Sept. 17 to complete their 60-day review of the agreement. A rejection of the deal by Congress would reduce the standing of the US in the world, Obama said.
While some Democrats have voiced support for the deal after lobbying from the White House, many are still on the fence. How they decide to vote could determine whether or not the nuclear agreement moves forward.
Obama has pledged veto any bill to reject the deal. His aides have said there is enough support among Democrats to sustain such a veto.
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