Letter to Hon. Antony Blinken, Secretary of State - Womack, House Republicans Urge Biden to Withdraw from Vienna Talks

Letter

By: Steve Womack, Robert Aderholt, French Hill, Debbie Lesko, Young Kim, Lauren Boebert, Mike Waltz, Greg Steube, Maria Salazar, Andrew Clyde, Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Mike Bost, Jackie Walorski, Jacob LaTurner, Garret Graves, Fred Upton, Peter Stauber, Vicky Hartzler, Madison Cawthorn, Lee Zeldin, Chris Jacobs, Bill Johnson, Dave Joyce, Frank Lucas, Brian Fitzpatrick, Joe Wilson, Sr., Tim Burchett, David Kustoff, Van Taylor, Jake Ellzey, Kay Granger, Pete Sessions, Beth Van Duyne, Michael Cloud, Chris Stewart, Dan Newhouse, Carol Miller, Gary Palmer, Andy Biggs, Tom McClintock, Ken Calvert, Doug Lamborn, Gus Bilirakis, Brian Mast, Buddy Carter, Jody Hice, Randy Feenstra, Adam Kinzinger, Jim Banks, Brett Guthrie, Jack Bergman, Jim Hagedorn, Ann Wagner, Billy Long, Adrian Smith, Elise Stefanik, Steve Chabot, Bob Gibbs, Anthony Gonzalez, Tom Cole, Dan Meuser, Jeff Duncan, Scott DesJarlais, Louie Gohmert, Pat Fallon, Michael McCaul, Ronny Jackson, Jodey Arrington, Roger Williams, Brian Babin, Ben Cline, Bryan Steil, Liz Cheney, Barry Moore, Rick Crawford, David Schweikert, Mike Garcia, Darrell Issa, John Rutherford, Vern Buchanan, Carlos Gimenez, Austin Scott, Ashley Hinson, Russ Fulcher, Darin LaHood, Jim Baird, Andy Barr, Peter Meijer, Tom Emmer, Blaine Luetkemeyer, Richard Hudson, Jr., Chris Smith, Claudia Tenney, Brad Wenstrup, Troy Balderson, Kevin Hern, Stephanie Bice, Jenniffer González-Colón, Ralph Norman, Jr., Mark Green, Dan Crenshaw, Lance Gooden, August Pfluger, Randy Weber, Sr., Chip Roy, Michael Burgess, Blake Moore, Morgan Griffith, David McKinley
Date: Jan. 12, 2022
Location: Washington, DC
Issues: Foreign Affairs

Dear Secretary Blinken,

We write to urge you to immediately withdraw from the fruitless Vienna talks to re-enter the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) and instead strongly enforce existing sanctions against Iran, particularly with respect to the oil trade between Iran and the People's Republic of China (PRC). Further delay of action on this only further enables Iran's malign activities, including their aggressive nuclear pursuits.

Administration officials' recent statements about the Vienna talks have made it clear that there is no productive diplomatic path forward at this time. Special Envoy for Iran Rob Malley said on December 21, "It seems very clear (Iran) is trying to build leverage by expanding their nuclear program and hoping to use that leverage to get a better deal." State Department Spokesman Ned Price said on Dec. 28, "Iran has at best been dragging its feet in the talks while accelerating its nuclear escalation," and "we have not yet seen sufficient urgency…demonstrated by Iran. Of course, the last couple rounds also started with new nuclear provocations and then were characterized by, in some cases, vague, unrealistic, unconstructive positions on the part of Iran."

Meanwhile, Iran is charging forward with its nuclear program, using advanced centrifuges and producing equipment for such centrifuges while stockpiling increasing quantities of uranium enriched at 20 percent and 60 percent purity. Iran also continues to gain irreversible knowledge through this nuclear work. While the Administration has consistently indicated a willingness to negotiate toward a return to the JCPOA, Iran has made a return even less valuable for the P5+1 as it makes greater nuclear gains and gets closer to the deal's sunsets. Moreover, Iran is no longer implementing the IAEA's additional protocol to its comprehensive safeguards agreement, further diminishing the world's visibility on Iran's nuclear program.

Iran's growing nuclear provocations, while stalling progress in negotiations, are the epitome of bad faith. The United States and our partners must increase pressure on Iran to stop its dangerous nuclear advancements. The most effective way to do so is to strongly enforce our existing sanctions and urge our partners to take similar steps. If Iran is not prepared to negotiate as things stand, we need to build our leverage to compel them to negotiate a better, stricter deal with no sunsets.

As a first, immediate step, the Administration must enforce penalties against the PRC's flagrant violations of U.S. sanctions on Iran's oil trade. Iran's oil shipments are now worth at least $1.3 billion per month, despite the fact that U.S. sanctions are still in effect. The PRC accounts for the bulk of these shipments. In September, Reuters reported that the Administration was prioritizing diplomatic engagement to solve this problem, with one official quoted as saying "this is a more effective path forward to address our concerns." Unfortunately, this strategy has not borne fruit. Reports in November showed that the PRC continued to import an average of over half a million barrels of Iranian oil per day. It is well past time for the Administration to end these farcical negotiations and fully enforce our existing sanctions to slash this vital source of revenue for the Iranian regime.

Thank you for your attention to this urgent matter.


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