Powell, Wasserman Schultz support Iran nuclear deal

Former secretary of state calls deal ‘pretty good,’ while Jewish lawmaker says it’s the best way to keep US and Israel safe

Colin Powell and Debbie Wasserman Schultz in images taken on September 3, 2015 (Carolyn Kaster/AP; Joel Auerbach/ AP)
Colin Powell and Debbie Wasserman Schultz in images taken on September 3, 2015 (Carolyn Kaster/AP; Joel Auerbach/ AP)

WASHINGTON — Already a done deal in Congress, the Iran nuclear agreement gained more momentum Sunday as former secretary of state Colin Powell and Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the Democratic National Committee head, announcement their support.

Powell, secretary of state under President George W. Bush, called the agreement “a pretty good deal” that would reduce the threat of Iran gaining a nuclear weapon.

Iran’s nuclear program “has been thrown into a detour” making it less likely it can produce a nuclear weapon to be used against Israel or other countries, Powell said. “So that’s pretty good,” he told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Wasserman Schultz, a Democrat from Florida, said the decision to endorse the agreement was the most difficult one she has made in nearly 23 years in elected office.

The Jewish lawmaker wrote in The Miami Herald that while she has concerns about the agreement, the deal “provides the best chance to ensure” security for the US, Israel and other allies.

“Under the agreement Iran will not be able to produce a nuclear bomb for at least 10-15 years,” she said, while the US and its allies “will be able to more closely concentrate on stopping Iran’s terrorist activity.”

The White House has clinched the necessary Senate votes to ensure that Congress will uphold the deal even if US President Barack Obama ends up having to veto a disapproval resolution set for a vote in the week ahead.

But with that support in hand and more piling up, the White House and congressional backers of the deal have begun aiming for a more ambitious goal: enough commitments to bottle up the disapproval resolution in the Senate with a filibuster, preventing it from even coming to a final vote.

That effort suffered a setback on Friday as Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland, top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he opposed the deal.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press.

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