NY Sun editorial falsely claimed Obama advocates "abandon[ing] economic sanctions" against Iran
SUMMARY: A New York Sun editorial claimed that Sen. Barack Obama and "many Democrats" advocate that the United States "abandon economic sanctions" against Iran. In fact, Obama introduced the Iran Sanctions Enabling Act on May 17, which would "authorize State and local governments to direct divestiture from, and prevent investment in, companies with investments of $20,000,000 or more in Iran's energy sector."
An October 4 New York Sun editorial claimed that Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) and "many Democrats" advocate that the United States "abandon economic sanctions" against Iran. In fact, Obama introduced the Iran Sanctions Enabling Act on May 17, which would "authorize State and local governments to direct divestiture from, and prevent investment in, companies with investments of $20,000,000 or more in Iran's energy sector." Obama referred to the legislation in an August 30 New York Daily News op-ed, in which he wrote: "For diplomacy to work, we need to dial up our political and economic pressure -- not just our tough talk."
The Sun editorial criticized Obama's October 2 statement that as president, he would "seek[] a world in which there are no nuclear weapons." According to the Sun, "Mr. Obama's words can only be -- and will be -- seen as the weakening of the American will to ensure that Iran does not get the bomb." Citing an October 2 Washington Post op-ed by Selig S. Harrison, director of the Asia Program at the Center for International Policy, the Sun editorial claimed that Iran "has set conditions" for a "grand compromise" with the United States that "go beyond requiring our administration to take the path advocated by Senator Obama and many Democrats, namely to abandon economic sanctions and talk of war and enter direct negotiations with the mullahs." Still citing Harrison, the Sun wrote that Iran would "still insist that Israel freeze activity in its alleged nuclear reactor and that America agree to a ban on it using nuclear weapons in the Gulf."
Obama, however, has advocated increasing -- not abandoning -- economic sanctions against Iran, as he wrote in his August 30 Daily News op-ed, headlined "Hit Iran where it Hurts":
The decision to wage a misguided war in Iraq has substantially strengthened Iran, which now poses the greatest strategic challenge to U.S. interests in the Middle East in a generation. Iran supports violent groups and sectarian politics in Iraq, fuels terror and extremism across the Middle East and continues to make progress on its nuclear program in defiance of the international community. Meanwhile, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has declared that Israel must be "wiped off the map."
In response, the Bush administration's policy has been tough talk with little action and even fewer results. While conventional Washington thinking says we can only talk to people who agree with us, I believe that strong countries and strong Presidents shouldn't be afraid to talk directly to our adversaries to tell them where America stands. The Bush-Cheney diplomacy of not talking to Iran has not worked. As President, I will use all elements of American power to pressure the Iranian regime, including the power of tough, smart and principled diplomacy.
For diplomacy to work, we need to dial up our political and economic pressure -- not just our tough talk. Iran's troubling behavior depends in large part on access to billions of dollars in oil and gas revenue. That is why I introduced the Iran Sanctions Enabling Act last May, to build on a movement across the country to divest from companies that do significant business with Iran. This would send a clear message about where America stands, increasing Iran's isolation and hitting the Iranian regime where it hurts.
According to a July 27 United Press International analysis, Obama's legislation would strengthen the current sanction laws against Iran:
The Iran Sanctions Enabling Act of 2007, introduced in both the House and the Senate, would strengthen existing legislation by mandating a comprehensive federal list of companies that invest more than $20 million in Iran's energy sector, directing states to divest such company holdings, and protecting pension-fund managers from lawsuits if purified pension funds have poor returns.
The Iran Sanctions Act, first passed as the Iran-Libya Sanctions Act in 1996, forbids most business activity between American firms and Iran and threatens penalties for foreign firms that invest more than $20 million in one year in the energy sector. Enforcement has been weak, however, in part because the executive branch has utilized the waiver provision.
As Obama noted in his op-ed, the House version of the Iran Sanctions Enabling Act, introduced by Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), passed on July 31 by a vote of 408-6, though the Senate version remains stalled due to a "hold" placed on the bill by an anonymous senator.
From the October 4 New York Sun editorial:
Mr. Obama is playing right into President Ahmadinejad's hands. How much of a stretch is it to go from a call for putting an end to all nuclear weapons to agreeing with Iran that there is equivalency between the Iranian nuclear weapons program and, to take one example, Israel's or Britain's or France's or our own? America, moreover, is in the midst of a diplomatic and economic campaign to stop the Iranian nuclear weapons program. President Bush has chosen the multilateral path that, according to his critics, including Mr. Obama, he eschewed in the run-up to the Iraqi war.
Mr. Obama's words can only be -- and will be -- seen as the weakening of the American will to ensure that Iran does not get the bomb. The connection between Mr. Obama's far-reaching statement on nuclear weapons policy and Iran was highlighted in Tuesday's Washington Post in a dispatch, "Sanctions Won't Stop Tehran," by Selig Harrison, who directs the Asia Program at the Center for International Policy. He argues that Iran has set conditions for a "grand compromise" with America that render such a deal impossible. The conditions go beyond requiring our administration to take the path advocated by Senator Obama and many Democrats, namely to abandon economic sanctions and talk of war and enter direct negotiations with the mullahs.
Mr. Harrison writes that even if America "drops its insistence on the suspension of uranium enrichment as a precondition for dialogue," Iran would not agree to "the terms for denuclearization accepted by North Korea" -- a no-attack pledge, normalized economic and diplomatic relations, economic aid, and removal from the State Department list of terrorist states. Iran, he says, would pocket all that and still insist that Israel freeze activity in its alleged nuclear reactor and that America agree to a ban on it using nuclear weapons in the Gulf. It is clear that such a demand would not be met by Israel.
From Harrison's October 2 Washington Post op-ed:
Suppose that the Bush administration abandons its campaign for economic sanctions, tones down talk of war and opens direct negotiations with Iran about its nuclear program. Suppose also that it drops its insistence on the suspension of uranium enrichment as a precondition for dialogue.
Would Iran accept the terms for denuclearization accepted by North Korea in the direct negotiations that led to the Feb. 13 agreement with Pyongyang and that are now being implemented in fits and starts: a no-attack pledge, normalized economic and diplomatic relations, economic aid, and removal from the U.S. list of terrorist states?
Based on a week of high-level discussions in Tehran recently and on previous visits during earlier stages of the nuclear program, my assessment is that Iran would demand much tougher terms, including a freeze of Israel's Dimona reactor and a ban on the U.S. use of nuclear weapons in the Persian Gulf.

















So...Obama refuses to recognize Iran's right to have nuclear power under the Non-Proliferation Treaty and wants to cause more tension between us and that country? Yup, real diplomat, that guy. Wonder how much the Iran-haters at AIPAC are paying him this election. Wonder what he would say if you ask him about Israel's "non-existent" nuclear arsenal and their refusal to sign up to the NPT.
We all know how much you hate Israel, it's in every post. But you are perfectly fine with Iran having a nucleur weapon? No problem?
Because we all know how truthful Ahmadinejad is.........
I hate watching three million people being packed to starve in ghettos by an ideology of religio-ethnic supremacy.
And Iran prides itself on not having attacked anyone, while Israel routinely commits acts of war against it's neighbours. Israel and the US are the prime threats to peace in the region, NOT Iran. It's the neo-cons who talk of using nuclear weapons on Iran without provocation. Who's the threat?
So you don't think that Hezbollah soldiers are trained and financed by Iran?
Hezbollah is not terrorist. They are a militia that fought an invading army to defend their nation, much like our Continental Army in the Revolution. France helped supply our militia in the later stages of the war. Unlike France, Iran has never sent troops to fight in Lebanon. I guess we were wrong to seek help from a larger nation in our struggle for independence, eh?
syria has sent troops into lebanon and been implicated in the bombing deaths of several lebanese politicians.
Did I even mention Syria? No.
This is a common zionist tactic which I call the Isreali finger-point. Whenever someone mentions Israel's crimes, they start trying to point fingers at someone else. Seen it done over and over and over again. It doesn't work on me.
i obviously knew you didn't mention syria. but you said that the u.s. and israel were the principal threats to peace in the area. but there are other factors like syria, which has been a destabilizing force in lebanon for many years. and you do have a bit of a "jewish problem", shall we say, because you claimed that israel and the bush administration knew specifically all about the 9-11 attack and "colluded" in doing nothing to stop it.
http://mediamatters.org/items/200609060008?offset=20&show=1#comments
The US and Israel ARE the biggest destabilizers in the region. Again, that Israeli finger-pointing game. If you think it's ok to oppress three million people in the name of a "pure" religio-ethnic state, then you are no better than a Nazi. Same racist ideology. Indefensible ideology.
what about the fact that you stated that israel participated in the 9-11 attack with the bush administration? stand by that?
"cheney and sharon's very own little reichstag fire". that true? i don't doubt the bush administration ignored warnings, i've said it many times, but i don't think israel participated in a plot to stage it.
You're trying to change the subject. Isreali finger-pointing. It ALWAYS happens. I've been in arguments with zio-nazis too many times. Always happens.
actually, you're the bigot. you accuse israel of participating in the destruction of the wtc without one ounce of evidence. you're the modern version of the guys spreading rumors that the jews poison wells.
Three million people packed into ghettos merely for not being jewish. And a Democrat who's opposing human rights by supporting that keeps trying to change the subject. Who the bigot?
you mean the gaza strip? who is it that's killing who there? who's doing the ethnic cleansing in the neighborhoods of iraq? is that israel? or is that muslim on muslim violence? somehow all those things escape your attention.
Not having attacked anyone? Besides funding terrorism to groups like Hezbollah, sending arms into Iraq to kill Americans, hanging gay teenagers - their leaders are real peachy.
So, you would be fine with them having a nucleur weapon?
Oh, so it's Iran that's making them Iraqis kill Americans, eh? What about CIA funding of seperatist groups inside Iran, or the anti-Iranian terrorist organizations Saddam backed that we did NOT disband when we invaded Iraq (one of which has become a main Shi'a militia in the Basra area)? Repeating the bs ultra-nationalist propaganda against Iran does not make it true.
as this transcript from the 2004 vice presidential debate shows, it was dick cheney who called for the lifiting of economic sanctions against iran while he was ceo of halliburton.
http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/10/05/debate.transcript2/index.html
It's no surprise to most of us that Commander Cheney would sell out his country for his own personal financial gain.
How is trading with Iran selling out the USA? Not that I'm defending Cheney, but Iran is a potential market of 55 million people with money to spend and was once a major buyer of US wheat. I'm all for normalizing relations.Besides, what has Iran ever done to us? We've done plenty to them though, destroyed a democracy there, backed a brutal dictator, etc. But they're the threat? It's nothing but scapegoating, mindless war-mongering.
i don't necessarily disagree but, the point is that it was convenient for cheney to call for ending economic sanctions against both iran and iraq before he became vice president. as for iran, we should work to encourage the moderates, something bush never did. but at the present, they are run by a rather fanatical goverment with little tolerance for dissent or difference.
this is a country that stones women to death for adultery. and to anticipate you, yeah we have our own problems, but we're a bit more tolerant.
http://www.amnestyusa.org/By_Country/Iran/page.do?id=1011172&n1=3&n2=30&n3=922
Perhaps we should mind our own business and not be messing around in other people's nations? Ever consider that?
i'm not saying attack them.
But we should try and change their government to suit you. When were you made ruler of Iran?
i did not even say change their government. but that does not mean accept everything they do.
We must whine about Iran but we should accept the occupation, oppression and ghettoization of three million people for the sake of a religio-ethnic "pure" state, done with US tax money? So much for you claiming liberal status. Just another far-right Democrat.
The U.S. politicians should be communicating with Iran instead of issuing threats. Diplomacy is the ONLY way to engage the leadership of this ancient country. Most of its citizens are far ahead of Ahmadinejad; most are young and far more progressive than their leaders.
As far as sanctions go, the U.S. and other nations that are seriously concerned about Iran militarily should stop selling them weapons.
The Israel Lobby won't let the US have diplomacy with Iran. All they want from the US is threats and bombs bursting in air over Tehran. Repubs and Dems are owned by the Lobby, so the threats will continue, no diplomcay allowed. Another good reason to vote Green. The major two are owned by the war-monger set. Greens would normalize relations with Iran and Cuba. Peace instead of Hate. Woudn't that be a wonderful change?
What's all the fuss over an editorial? It's just that AN EDITORIAL, get it!