Chairman Royce Continues Iran Deal Examination

Webp 9edited

Chairman Royce Continues Iran Deal Examination

The following press release was published by the House Committee on Foreign Affairs on Sept. 8, 2015. It is reproduced in full below.

Announces Two Iran Hearings This Week

Today, U.S. Rep. Ed Royce (R-CA), Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, announced that on Friday, Sept. 11, the Committee will convene a hearing entitled, “Implications of a Nuclear Agreement with Iran (Part V)." The hearing will begin at 9 a.m. and follows a hearing on Wednesday, September 9, to examine the Iran nuclear deal, where former generals will provide their perspectives of the agreement. Details about the hearing on September 9 can be found here.

Chairman Royce said: “This agreement is fatally flawed. The Obama Administration has committed to providing Iran permanent sanctions relief from the U.S. in return for temporary and inadequate constraints on Iran’s nuclear program. It will permit Iran to launch an industrial-scale nuclear program after 10 years, continue to block international inspectors from its secret nuclear facilities, hide its past work on a nuclear weapon, and emerge with its record wiped clean. This hearing is part of a series to examine the nuclear agreement and discuss ways to lessen the fallout from this bad deal."

What.

Hearing: Implications of a Nuclear Agreement with Iran (Part V)

When.

9 a.m. on Friday, September 11

Where.

2172 Rayburn House Office Building

Witnesses.

The Honorable Juan C. Zarate

Chairman

Center on Sanctions and illicit Finance

Foundation for the Defense of Democracies

Robert Satloff, Ph.D.

Executive Director

Howard P. Berkowitz Chair in U.S. Middle East Policy

The Washington Institute

Olli Heinonen, Ph.D.

Senior Fellow

Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs

John F. Kennedy School of Government

Harvard University

Mr. Robert Einhorn

Senior Fellow

Center for 21st Century Security and Intelligence

Arms Control and Non-Proliferation Initiative

Foreign Policy Program

The Brookings Institution.

Source: House Committee on Foreign Affairs

More News