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Post Info TOPIC: Obama’s Pallets of Cash to Iran: ‘It Keeps Getting Worse


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Obama’s Pallets of Cash to Iran: ‘It Keeps Getting Worse
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The Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence told Breitbart News Thursday the more he learns about the reality of President Barack Obama’s Iran deal the more shocked he becomes at its reckless disregard for the safety of Americans.

“The Obama Administration and Secretaries Clinton and Kerry insisted that the Iranian deal was beneficial to the United States, and proceeded with the deal despite warnings from experts and the wishes of the American people,” said Sen. Richard Burr (R.-N.C.), who is a direct descendant of the family of Aaron Burr, Thomas Jefferson’s first vice-president and the man who shot Alexander Hamilton in a duel July 11, 1804 at dueling grounds in Weehawken, New Jersey.

“Now, we learn that the administration sent pallets of cash to the Iranians, a designated state sponsor of terrorism,” he said. “This decision from day one was a bad one for the American people and it keeps getting worse.”

 
 
Video: Obama on Iran Payment: 'We Do Not Pay Ransom'
 
 
 
 

In addition to Secretary of State John F. KerryBurr said he blames former first ladyHillary R. Clinton for her role in the Iran deal as Obama’s first secretary of state. “This has been and will continue to be a bad deal for the United States. The administration, including President Obama and Secretary Clinton, is responsible for leading America into a deal that will arm Iran, the number one state sponsor of terrorism.”

“It alarms me as the Chairman of the Intelligence Committee that something of this magnitude was not briefed to me–not only prior to the exchange, but since the exchange,” the senator said.

Instead of hearing from the White House, as would be expected, Burr said he found about it in the paper. “Only through, in this case, The Wall Street Journal did the American people know the truth about what was committed by the American government to the Iranian government.”

The WSJ reported Tuesday: “Wooden pallets stacked with euros, Swiss francs and other currencies were flown into Iran on an unmarked cargo plane, according to these officials. The U.S. procured the money from the central banks of the Netherlands and Switzerland.” The paper also reported that the shipment of cash coincided with Iran’s release of four of its America hostages.

The president, speaking at the White House Cabinet Room, gave a lengthy statement about the resolution of the negotiations with the Islamic Republic of Iran and its nuclear program and the return of the hostages from their “lonely cells,” but he did not spell out how pallets of cash sweetened the deal.

“The United States and Iran are now settling a longstanding Iranian government claim against the United States government,” he said Jan. 17 from the White House. “Iran will be returned its own funds, including appropriate interest, but much less than the amount Iran sought.”

The president seemed to be saying that by thawing Iranian assets and by paying the Iranians interest, America was coming out ahead on the deal.

“For the United States, this settlement could save us billions of dollars that could have been pursued by Iran,” he said. “There was no benefit to the United States in dragging this out. With the nuclear deal done, prisoners released, the time was right to resolve this dispute as well.”

Burr said his Democratic opponent needs to update North Carolina voters on her support of Obama’s Iran deal.

“Deborah Ross has yet to weigh in on the recent news regarding Iran and there has been no indication that her support for the Iran deal has waned after these recent revelations,” he said.

 

“Her silence is another example of her being woefully inexperienced on matters of national security and foreign policy.”



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Pallets of cash in a plane to Iran. HELLOOOO!!!!! Is anyone listening???!!!! Wow.

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Frozen Sucks!

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This needs to be plastered all over social media.

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Frozen Sucks!

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Link please.

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I'm not the op, but here's the link.

www.breitbart.com/big-government/2016/08/04/exclusive-senate-intel-chair-on-obamas-pallets-of-cash-to-iran-it-keeps-getting-worse/

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Frozen Sucks!

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Domestic Engineer wrote:

I'm not the op, but here's the link.

www.breitbart.com/big-government/2016/08/04/exclusive-senate-intel-chair-on-obamas-pallets-of-cash-to-iran-it-keeps-getting-worse/


 But you are a good stand in.biggrin



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In an unmarked plane in the middle of the night, no less.

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Or, how about you do some research and find out what the money was actually for.

time.com/4441046/400-million-iran-hostage-history/

The money was part of a hostage deal, but not the one some might think

It does look fishy as all get out: $400 million in assorted denominations, stacked on wooden pallets and flown to Tehran in the dead of night by the government of the United States. Hours later, five imprisoned Americans are released and board planes to freedom. If that situation—which took place in January—doesn’t look like a hostage deal, what does?

Answer: The actual hostage deal that in fact accounts for the cash payment, which President Obama said on Thursday was not a ransom.

The currency shipped to Iran in the dead of night drew attention from presidential candidate Donald Trump this week, who on Friday appeared to walk back an earlier assertion that he had seen a payment being delivered. But that money was owed to the Islamic Republic since 1979, the year the U.S. froze all the Iranian funds in American banks as retribution for seizure of the U.S. embassy in Tehran, as revolution swept that nation.

What was universally known as the Iran hostage crisis went on for more than a year, and finally ended with a bargain: In exchange for the release of 52 American diplomats and citizens, both sides agreed to resolve the question of money through international arbitration. The Iran-United States Claims Tribunal has trudged along for almost four decades now, and the money has flowed both ways. By 1983, Iran had returned $896 million to U.S. banks, which in turn had returned hundreds of millions in frozen funds to Iran. Today, private claims from the U.S. side have been resolved to the tune of $2.1 billion.

But still at issue as Obama began his second term was $400 million that Iran in the late 1970s had paid for U.S. fighter jets, while Tehran was still a U.S. ally. After it turned into an enemy in 1979, Washington was not about to deliver the jets. But, all these years later, Iran wanted its money back—and with interest.

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All told, Tehran was asking The Hague arbitrators (comprising equal numbers of U.S., Iranian and neutral judges) for $10 billion. Fearing they might actually be awarded that much, or something like it, the Obama administration negotiated privately with Tehran, which agreed to settle for $1.7 billion. The $400 million stacked on pallets was the first installment.

The day it arrived, however, a great deal else was going on. January 17 was the day the international compact rolling back Iran’s nuclear program was set to take formal effect. It was also the day that Iran had, privately, agreed to release five Americans it had imprisoned on spurious charges. At the same time, the Obama administration would release seven Iranians the U.S. had held for violating sanctions—the same sanctions that had brought Iran to the negotiating table, and indeed had necessitated doing business in cash, Iran’s banks having been cut off from the international banking system.

There were a lot of moving parts and fraying nerves at the time—and the whole teetering contraption nearly came crashing down when a couple of U.S. Navy river boats strayed into Iranian waters, and were taken by the Revolutionary Guards five days before the big day. To those who follow U.S.-Iranian relations, the swiftness of the sailors’ release—the very next day—was the most impressive indication of how badly both sides wanted January 17 to come off as planned.

At least till now.

The pallets of Euros and Swiss francs are even more vivid a symbol. To Iran-watchers, they show how badly Obama’s team wanted to bolster Iran’s moderate leaders, who had promised their public that the nuclear deal would produce immediate economic improvements. It also helps to bear in mind that Iran’s theocratic government works on a patronage system. When Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was president, it was his loyalists who got the contracts to smuggle Iran’s oil past the sanctions; President Hassan Rouhani is now grappling with the fallout from paying his own people tens of thousands a month. In short, cash and a show of good will were much in demand.

Were the prisoners a factor? Even on Jan. 17, when the apparent quid pro quo was Obama’s grant of clemency to the seven Iranians, the concept of hostage-taking haunts every transaction with Iran.

The mullahs insisted that Jimmy Carter have left office before releasing the 52 original hostages, minutes after Ronald Reagan was sworn in Jan. 21, 1981. The “arms for hostages” scandal that marred Reagan’s second term brought together Iran, Central American insurgencies and U.S. prisoners held by Iranian surrogates.

Nor was President Obama the first president to look for leverage in The Hague. A flurry of claims settlements in 1989 came as President George H.W. Bush attempted to persuade Tehran to help release more American hostages, a group that was being held in Lebanon. “I’d like to get this underbrush cleaned out now,” Bush said, after the U.S. announced it was releasing $567 million in frozen assets to Tehran. “I hope,” Bush added, “they will do what they can to influence those who hold these hostages.”

At the time, a State Department official quoted in TIME acknowledged what amounted to a dance: “You want to do things that are justifiable on their own merits and defensible in terms of U.S. interests. And if Iran wants to take it as a signal, fine.” And, if not dandy, at least the way things seem to work with Iran.

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You know, after WWII, Germany was left to clean up its own mess.

Instead of giving countries "I'm sorry" money, let them dig themselves out of the mess they've made.

This money Obama sent is nothing more than an installment plan to secure his place in terroism. He is funding terrorists.

Call it what ever you want. But that is what it is.

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It's illegal to give US dollars which is why he used foreign currency. It was shady, pure and simple.

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