Referring to the US Constitution, almost 50 politicians said that while it is the president who negotiates international agreements, "Congress plays the significant role of ratifying them."
"We will consider any agreement regarding your nuclear-weapons program that is not approved by the Congress as nothing more than an executive agreement between President Obama and Ayatollah Khamenei," says the senators' letter to the leaders of the Islamic Republic of Iran, as reported by Bloomberg.
READ MORE: US hammers out ‘bottom lines’ for Iran nuclear deal
Signed by the entire Republican party leadership, including several potential 2016 primaries' presidential runners, the document warned Iran's government that an agreement signed by Obama may not last for long, as it could be revoked by the next president "with the stroke of a pen."
The senators explained their move to be educational, aiming to "enrich your [Iranian leaders] knowledge of our [US] constitutional system." They pointed out: "Obama will leave office in January 2017, while most of us will remain in office well beyond then - perhaps decades," they wrote, referring to a constitutional right of senators' unlimited number of 6-year terms.
Well, that's embarrassing. "US civics education" letter to Iran from 47 GOP senators gets treaty ratification wrong. http://t.co/9OEi3lE89O
— Yishai Schwartz (@YishaiSchwartz) March 9, 2015
Warning Iran to "seriously consider" their letter "as negotiations progress," the initiative can also be regarded as Congress's effort to obtain more authority from the White House in the talks and decision making over the nuclear deal. Tensions over the negotiation process have already increased within the US, especially after last week's controversial visit by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Senate calls for more of a role in US-Iran nuke negotiations: http://t.co/ItA5KP00dvhttp://ift.tt/1BjN23C
— The Hill (@thehill) February 28, 2015
Netanyahu’s invitation to speak before Congress was extended to the Israeli leader by Republican lawmakers without the prior knowledge of the White House, which is standard protocol in such cases. After the speech, Obama said Netanyahu did not offer any real alternative amid the ongoing negotiations, while the Israeli leader has called his trip to Washington "a fateful, even historic mission."
READ MORE: Netanyahu offered no ‘viable alternative’ to Iran nuclear deal - Obama
The ongoing talks on Iran's nuclear ambitions and uranium enrichment capacity, with the so-called P5+1 group (the US, Britain, China, Russia, France and Germany), failed to reach a conclusion by the previous deadline of November last year. Now negotiators are under pressure to reach an agreement with Iran by the end of this month, with the final technical details to be hammered out by June 30.
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