Update: this action, now closed, ran in November 2013.
Just as a diplomatic solution to the Iran crisis appears potentially within reach, and at a time when the Obama Administration is imploring Congress to give it the space it needs to test this possibility, pressure is mounting for Congress to push ahead with new sanctions against Iran. Some are arguing that putting a gun to Iran's head during negotiations while tying the hands of Obama Administration negotiators is a way of promoting successful negotiations.
In truth, such an approach is probably the fastest way to undermine the U.S. negotiating efforts and, to the extent
that there are Iranian officials today who may be serious about negotiating a deal, it is probably the most
effective way to discredit them and strengthen Iranian hardliners.
Click here to
contact your Senators today. Tell them that now is the time for Congress to adopt a Hippocratic oath with respect
to Iran diplomacy: do no harm. Going ahead with new sanctions at this time is reckless and irresponsible.
Passing legislation that further limits U.S. negotiating options and flexibility is rash and shortsighted. Now is
the time for Congress to give diplomacy a chance to work and to give the Obama Administration maximum room to
maneuver.
Click here to tell
your Senators: Now is the time to support diplomacy. Now is not the time to undermine diplomacy with new
sanctions.
Pursuing additional sanctions today sends a message that Congress doesn't want a negotiated solution to Iran's
nuclear program. Indeed, legislating new sanctions will be understood by many, in Iran and the international
community, as a declaration that Congress actively wants to scuttle the ongoing diplomatic effort. Such an approach
will also bolster arguments that congressional sanctions and saber-rattling have been driven all along, not by the
goal of changing Iran's policy vis-à-vis its nuclear program, but rather by the goal of changing the Iranian
regime.
Click here to tell
your Senators: Diplomacy holds a real chance of resolving U.S. differences with Iran without having to go to war.
Don't undermine it!
Thank you,