Is the Letter to Iran Treason?


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March 14, 2015
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Most Republican members of the U.S. Senate have signed a public letter to the Iranian government warning that any agreement with President Obama that is not approved by the Senate is likely to be transitory and counterproductive for all concerned. Under the pretense of helpfully schooling the Iranians on the American constitutional system, the letter is really designed to embarrass President Obama and hinder negotiations between the U.S. and Iran over possible nuclear weapon proliferation.

The letter has attracted a lot of attention. Is it unprecedented? Is it treasonous? Does it repudiate the post-World War II tradition of partisanship stopping at the water’s edge?

It is not unprecedented. During the George W. Bush years, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi met with Syrian government officials at a time when the President was seeking to geopolitically isolate the Assad regime. Many Republicans–including Fox News pundits–were outraged by her foray into international affairs while many Democrats defended it. Prior to the Iraq War in 2002-03, some Democratic members of Congress travelled to Iraq on a peace mission. Again, the response mostly fell along predictable partisan and ideological lines.

It is not treasonous. Treason is not about questioning or disagreeing with the President. National media which are sympathetic to Obama decry the impropriety of undercutting the Commander in Chief. But Obama is not the Commander in Chief of Congress . . . or of the American people. This is a specific title referring to chain of command for enlisted military personnel. Constitutionally, the President was never intended to be a national dictator. Over the years, especially during the past century, Congress has unconstitutionally and unwisely abrogated many of its powers to the Executive Branch (including the war-making power). This has led to an imperial presidency that works against both constitutional balance and popular sovereignty.

On the surface, the GOP letter to Iran seems to be concerned about executive overreaching by Obama. But its main author, Senator Cotton, freely admits that the real intent of the letter is to damage prospects for an agreement with Iran. It is not a serious constitutional argument. Most Republicans in D.C. have no qualms about executive agreements per se. Bush and previous presidents routinely relied on them even though the practice is nowhere to be found in the Constitution. Unfortunately, the Supreme Court has granted Presidents the power to negotiate agreements with foreign powers without Senate consultation and consent. Along with executive orders and executive privilege (two other extra-constitutional powers), this has helped to put many executive actions beyond the authority of legislators. But Republican legislators are not really concerned about executive overreach. When their party does it, they don’t complain.

So there is hyperbole and nonsense on both sides of the aisle. Indignation over Obama’s methods is feigned. Accusations of treason are silly. If there is treason to be found, it is not because the President’s near-monopoly on foreign policy is being challenged by a theoretically co-equal branch of government.

Conservative grassroots Republicans, who take their principles far more seriously than do most of their elected representatives in Washington, might think that Obama is guilty of treason for “cozying up” to the Iranians. And yet, realistically speaking, Iran is no threat and no rival to the U.S. government or the American people. It is, however, a rival and possible threat to Israel. Why are so many GOP members of Congress fixated on the interests of a foreign government? What is it about Israel that sparks such a sacrosanct, near-unanimous party line? That produced standing ovation after standing ovation for Netanyahu when he addressed Congress? These are interesting and rarely-discussed questions. Emotional attachment and political loyalty to a foreign power could itself be interpreted by some as a form of treason (depending on how American patriotism is defined).

Very few Republican politicians have a Jewish ethnic or Judaistic religious bond to Israel. In their case, it seems to stem from two different concerns: friendship with what President Eisenhower called the military-industrial complex and belief in a global empire (“Pax Americana”) that makes use of enormous military might. When you create an empire you shouldn’t be surprised when the nation’s executive acts like an emperor. The old republic is long gone, as are its quaint traditions. This is one reason that the neoconservatism of Republican globalists is not genuinely conservative; it is Wilson-FDR-Humphrey liberalism under the guise of GOP conservatism.

Israel plays an important role as a geopolitical ally in the Middle East as the federal government attempts to police the world. Given their political, economic, and military interests, GOP politicians naturally gravitate toward hawkish, hardline Israeli governments. In addition, AIPAC and other American interest groups supporting such Israeli politicians are generous with monetary carrots and sticks. Money influences politics and foreign policy is no exception . . . whether it comes from partisans of foreign governments or CEOs of military contractors. In this milieu, peace and security are rarely desired outcomes. Fear and insecurity work better. To put it simply, war and preparations for war make money.  Peace is not lucrative. Eisenhower, a Republican who had previously been a U.S. Army five-star general and NATO supreme commander, explained it well in his 1953 and 1961 speeches. Jesus may have blessed the meek and the peace-makers, but it is the strong and the war-makers who are in the driver’s seat of the present world order.

To add one more disheartening element to a discouraging context, we have to admit that simple partisanship–yet another means of trying to hurt Obama and the Democrats–is another major factor in the Republican senators’ letter to Iran. This wouldn’t be so bad if it were principled. For the most part, it isn’t. President Obama has done plenty of bad things but he is often attacked by GOP leaders for doing bad things that President Bush did earlier while they were silent or supportive. There is no consistency or idealism, just partisan jockeying and demagoguery. Of course, Democratic politicians tend to be no better when it comes to such matters.

Two closing points. First: Serious debate about an agreement with Iran would be healthy. There is nothing wrong with disagreeing with a President or having partisan debates over foreign policy when human lives and important principles are at stake. Second: When the U.S. government enters into agreements with foreign nations, Senate approval should be required for implementation. Rule-makers should follow the foundational rules of the U.S. government.

Sadly, neither the Senate under Mitch McConnell nor the White House under Barack Obama have much interest in honest debate or constitutional framework. Our nation, and the world, are in great need of Christians (and others) in Washington who know how the Machiavellian game is played but have retained their integrity, who are wise as serpents and innocent as doves.

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  1. Good article. I think we also must acknowledge the impact of dispensational theology on Republican politics, leading to an unqualified support for Israel regardless of that nation’s subjugation of its Palestinian population. It is ironic to see how certain figures on the right ignore the plight of Palestinian Christians–not to mention the destructive impact of Bush and Cheney’s war in Iraq on Christians throughout the Middle East.

  2. Don’t worry, the US no longer needs Israel, and their relationship has never been lockstep. It is changing again in dramatic ways. Grandstanding politicians mean nothing to US-Israeli relations. To understand foreign policy, ignore politics and read military and economic strategy analysts. Dutch-Jewish military historian Marin Levi van Creveld is good on these subjects.

    The US-Israeli relationship did not develop because of the religious right; the religious right, which was previously rather anti-semitic, was simply led to support new policy after Egypt and Syria became pro-Soviet in 1956-67. That was when the US superseded France as Israel’s main weapons supplier. For its part the US was then able to set up an air defense network from Saudi Arabia to Israel and Jordan. Hal Lindsey’s apocalyptic contribution shortly thereafter was just icing on the cake for the pols. Reagan intervened in Beirut not to “help” Israel but to stop the Israelis from doing so.

    After the Soviet collapse the US no longer needed Israel. There was no need to end the relationship, so it remained, but Iran and Iraq needed a new patron. Israel would like the US to be its exclusive patron and thought 9/11 would encourage that, but the reality is increasingly clear that the US can’t alienate and fight every Arab state if it wishes to keep Islamic terrorists off its soil. In the case of Iran, it is always only a threat to Israel, but to the US it is useful against Iraq, Syria, ISIS, etc. Israel is simply focused on Iran’s nuclear capacity, but the US cannot be because it is not threat to the US, and it is not clear that anything can be done about it by the US and even Israel. The US needs to create a new balance of power in the middle east, and Israel will never be happy being balanced. It will always want to have the US do its dirty work as its loyal servant, but this is a fantasy and totally unnecessary. Israel is a nuclear power and can well fend for itself.

    1. Israel fending for itself is an Israel where the US no longer has any leverage to promote a peaceful and democratic settlement with Palestine. It looks more and more like Israel could turn to a one-state “solution” in which Palestinians don’t get to vote. A Jewish professor of moral philosophy at Yale recently wrote after Israel’s national elections and Netanyahu’s candid statements that “Israel has become, this week, the Herrenvolk ethnocracy its detractors have accused it of long being. …. It breaks my heart to say this, but today I don’t feel I can call myself a Zionist any longer.” Has any American pro-Israel politician ever had such scruples?

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