HomeAmericaPossible deal on Iran divides US lawmakers largely along party lines

Possible deal on Iran divides US lawmakers largely along party lines

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May 24 (Reuters) - U.S. lawmakers appearing ‌on Sunday morning talk shows split sharply over a potential deal to ​end the Iran war, with Republicans mostly backing the publicly reported contours of an agreement being negotiated by President Donald ⁠Trump and Democrats dismissing it as accomplishing little.

• Senator Chris Van Hollen, a Maryland Democrat and a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said the reported outlines of a deal sounded like ​little more than "the pre-war status quo" with Iran. "I think this was a blunder," Van Hollen said on the "Fox News ‌Sunday" program. "When you're digging a hole, you should stop digging, and that sounds like maybe what we're doing finally."

• Representative Mike Lawler, a New York Republican who sits on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, praised ⁠Trump's approach to talks with Iran. "I think on the whole what the administration ⁠has been able to do for the first time in 47 years is force the remnants of this regime into a negotiation, a real negotiation," Lawler said on CBS' "Face the Nation."

• Senator Cory Booker, a New Jersey Democrat, said Trump was being "played as a fool" in negotiations. "He's got us in a ‌situation that's worse than it was before, a more extreme regime," Booker told CNN's "State of the ⁠Union" show. "(The) Strait of Hormuz now is a leveraging point for ‌them. This weak nation has put America in a stalemate.”

• Republican ​Senator Bill Hagerty of Tennessee said any deal will have "strict" terms to ensure that Iran has no path to a nuclear weapon. "I think they'll be very enforceable," Hagerty told "Sunday Briefing" on Fox ‌News. "And remember … President Trump has used military force to basically annihilate the ​economic, technological, and military capacity of the ⁠Iranian regime. They're in a fundamentally different place."

• Republican Senator Thom Tillis of ‌North Carolina, who often criticizes Trump, suggested on CNN's "State ⁠of the Union" that the reported details represent a shift in the administration's stance. "We were told about 11 weeks ago, by (U.S. Defense Secretary Pete) Hegseth and the Department of Defense, that they had ​obliterated Iran's defenses and it was ‌just a matter of time before we had the nuclear material," Tillis said. "Now we're talking about a ⁠posture where we may accept the nuclear material ​remaining in Iran. How does that make sense at all?"

(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; ​Editing by Sergio Non and Deepa Babington)

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