Graham: Iran Ceasefire Deal ‘Negotiating Document’ Has some ‘Troubling Aspects’
Graham wants architects of the agreement to explain how it protects U.S. security and says Congress should review it like the 2015 Iran deal.
- Senator Lindsey Graham described the Iran ceasefire deal as a 'negotiating document' with some 'troubling aspects' and called for congressional review before approval.
- Vice President JD Vance, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner are scheduled to negotiate with Iran to work towards a broader peace agreement.
- Iran's 10-point plan for the ceasefire included demands such as repaying war damages, continuing uranium enrichment, controlling the Strait of Hormuz, and lifting sanctions.
- The White House reported multiple bipartisan congressional briefings on the Iran situation, but it is unclear if administration officials will testify further about the ceasefire deal.
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Exclusive: A Trump deal with Iran would likely get a vote in Congress
The NewsAny deal President Donald Trump reaches to end the Iran war could end up getting a congressional vote. Democrats believe the 2015 Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act would apply to an agreement the president reaches with Iran that touches on its nuclear program, something any deal is likely to include. “Any agreement relating to Iran’s nuclear program must be submitted to Congress pursuant to the” nuclear review law, said a Democratic aide…
Sen. Graham seeks congressional review of any peace deal with Iran
Sen. Lindsey Graham said in a post on the social platform X that he looks forward to the architects of the proposal, including Vice President JD Vance and others, coming to Congress and explaining how the deal meets America’s national security objectives.
Graham: Iran ceasefire deal ‘negotiating document’ has some ‘troubling aspects’
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said Wednesday that the “negotiating document” to permanently end hostilities between the U.S. and Iran “has some troubling aspects,” after President Trump decided to pause strikes on the Middle Eastern country for two weeks. “Again a diplomatic solution to end the reign of terror in Iran is the preferred outcome,” Graham…
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