Charles Krauthammer . . . "This tragicomedy is now in the hands of Congress or, more
accurately, of congressional Democrats. It is only because so many
Democrats are defecting that Obama gave the AU speech in the first
place. And why he tried so mightily to turn the argument into a partisan
issue — those warmongering Republicans attacking a president offering
peace in our time. Obama stooped low, accusing the Republican caucus of
making “common cause” with the Iranian “hard-liners” who shout “Death to
America.' ”. . .
Obama and Iran’s ‘Hardliners’ . . . "To be sure, Obama’s media friends are helping him broadcast this fairy tale; that, no doubt, is why the president is able to run to the nearest college campus and get applause for his kooky claims. But the reality is that Khamenei – the guy Obama implored to cooperate with him – is the chief hardliner. The Iran deal could not have happened unless Khamenei supported it; he supports it precisely because it is breathtakingly good for Iran." . . .
. . .
"Common cause with the Iranian hard-liners? Who more than Obama? For
years, they conduct a rogue nuclear weapons program in defiance of
multiple Security Council declarations of its illegality backed by
sanctions and embargoes. Obama rewards them with a treaty that
legitimates their entire nuclear program, lifts the embargo on
conventional weapons and ballistic missiles, and revives an economy —
described by Iran’s president as headed back to “the Stone Age” under
sanctions — with an injection of up to $150 billion in unfrozen assets,
permission for the unlimited selling of oil, and full access to the
international financial system." . . . Read more
Obama and Iran’s ‘Hardliners’ . . . "To be sure, Obama’s media friends are helping him broadcast this fairy tale; that, no doubt, is why the president is able to run to the nearest college campus and get applause for his kooky claims. But the reality is that Khamenei – the guy Obama implored to cooperate with him – is the chief hardliner. The Iran deal could not have happened unless Khamenei supported it; he supports it precisely because it is breathtakingly good for Iran." . . .