The Washington Post | Carol Morello: The nomination of Mike Pompeo to be the next secretary of state signals President Trumps determination to quit the landmark Iran nuclear deal, which could cause it to unravel, according to national security and arms-control experts.
If Pompeo is confirmed, Trump will have at his side an adviser who is equally as hard line on Iran and a harsh critic of the2015 multilateral agreementbetween the United States and other world powers.
Now you have the appointment of someone who has made it an article of faith that the Iran deal is a bad deal that needs to be ripped up, said Robert Malley, president of the International Crisis Group who helped broker the Iran negotiations under the Obama administration. It may well be the first casualty of Tillersons ousting will be the end of the Iran deal.
Pompeo has frequently expressed scorn for Iran, which he once characterized as a thuggish police state and a despotic theocracy. Just before Trump named him to head the CIA, Pompeo tweeted that he looked forward to rolling back the nuclear deal, which he called disastrous.
As secretary of state, it will fall to Pompeo to certify whether Iran is meeting its nuclear commitments under the deal, as required every 90 days under U.S. law.
Rex Tillerson, who was fired Tuesday as secretary of state, always concluded that Iran was complying as international monitors have reported, although not in its spirit. He had urged the president to stay in the agreement to keep leverage over Irans ballistic missile testing and other actions not covered under the agreement. Although they disagreed on many foreign policy issues, Trump mentioned only the Iran deal in explaining why he thought it was time for Tillerson to go.
After Trump named Pompeo as Tillersons replacement, Mark Dubowitz, head of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, tweeted that Pompeo is Exhibit A of Trumps seriousness aboutwalking away from the dealif there is no agreement to amend it.
Now he has a secretary of state who 100percent shares his views on the nature and gravity of the Iranian threat and the fatal flaws of the JCPOA, Dubowitz said in an interview, using the initialism for the deals official name. Now there is no daylight between the president and the secretary of state.
Pompeo is expected to have his confirmation hearing in April, the month before a May12 deadline for Trump to decide whether to reimpose sanctions that were suspended in exchange for Irans acceptance of limits on its nuclear program. However, nothing would prevent Trump from withdrawing at any time before then.
A U.S. pullback probably would kill the deal outright, even if the Europeans and other parties to the agreement strive to keep it alive. That is because other countries, businesses and financial institutions would be inclined to curb their interactions with Iran, eroding any motivation for Iran to stay in it.
Russia, another signatory to the deal, has said the agreement would collapse if one party withdraws. Some Iranian officials have said the same, although others hope to stick with it because it has ended the countrys economic isolation.
But Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, who was a member of the Iranian negotiating team, said that if America withdraws from the nuclear deal, Iran will follow suit, Iranian media reported.
On Monday, Behrouz Kamalvandi, a spokesman for the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, said it could step up its production of enriched uranium within two days. Ali Khorram, a former Iranian diplomat, writing in his column in the daily newspaper Arman, called Pompeo cowboyish in character and eager to start a war similar to the war with Iraq.
ne potential lifeline for the Iran deal comes Friday in Vienna. Britain, China, the European Union, France, Germany, Russia and the United States will meet there at the International Atomic Energy Agency headquarters for a meeting of a committee tasked with settling issues that arise.
The United States will be represented by Brian Hook, the State Departments head of policy planning. Hook has beennegotiating with Europeans on possible fixes to the deal, primarily involving Irans ballistic missile program, support for militant groups such as Hezbollah and sunset clauses that cause various limitations on Iran to expire years from now.
Those periodic conclaves often are used for sideline meetings between delegations from the United States and Iran.
Some analysts say that Pompeo may moderate some of his criticisms of the nuclear deal if he becomes secretary of state and slips into the role. As a member of Congress and then head of the CIA, he never carried the responsibility of coming up with solutions to his criticisms.
The logic of the situation remains the same, no matter what Mr. Pompeo may want to do or Mr. Trump would like to do, said Daryl G. Kimball, head of the Arms Control Association. It makes no sense for America to blow up the Iran nuclear deal, create a new nuclear crisis and undermine the presidents new diplomatic initiative to start North Korea on the path to denuclearize. If Mike Pompeo is worth his salt, he will point this out.
Carol Morello is the diplomatic correspondent for The Washington Post, covering the State Department. She previously wrote about demographics and the census. She has worked at The Post since 2000. Before that, she was a reporter for the Philadelphia Inquirer and USA Today.