September 26th, 2007 by Scott

Congress Votes for Tighter Sanctions on Iran

At least the House of Representatives did:

Congress signaled its disapproval of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad with a vote Tuesday to tighten sanctions against his government and a call to designate his army a terrorist group.

The swift rebuke was a rare display of bipartisan cooperation in a Congress bitterly divided on the Iraq war. It reflected lawmakers’ long-standing nervousness about Tehran’s intentions in the region, particularly toward Israel—a sentiment fueled by the pro-Israeli lobby whose influence reaches across party lines in Congress.

“Iran faces a choice between a very big carrot and a very sharp stick,” said Rep. Tom Lantos, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “It is my hope that they will take the carrot. But today, we are putting the stick in place.”

The House passed, by a 397-16 vote, a proposal by Lantos, D-Calif., aimed at blocking foreign investment in Iran, in particular its lucrative energy sector. The bill would specifically bar the president from waiving U.S. sanctions.

Current law imposes sanctions against any foreign company that invests $20 million or more in Iran’s energy industry, although the U.S. has waived or ignored sanction laws in exchange for European support on nonproliferation issues.

In the Senate, Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., and Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., proposed a nonbinding resolution urging the State Department to label Iran’s military—the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps—a terrorist organization.

The Bush administration had already been planning to blacklist a unit within the Revolutionary Guard, subjecting part of the vast military operation to financial sanctions.

The legislative push came a day after Ahmadinejad defended Holocaust revisionists, questioned who carried out the Sept. 11 attacks and declared homosexuals didn’t exist in Iran in a tense question-and- answer session at Columbia University.

Every member of the Hoosier delegation save one voted for this, and kudos to them (and that goes for Baron, too).

The lone non-vote was from Julia Carson.

As usual, she wasn’t present to vote.

Someday, the folks in Indianapolis are going to wake up and wish that they had representation in Congress.

This post is also available at Hoosierpundit.

One Response to “Congress Votes for Tighter Sanctions on Iran”

  1. Put her in the same company as Dennis The Menace K00kcinich. Whether Dennis or Ghetto Queen were there or not - Queen was probably having her evening Thunderbird. Dennis the Menace likely didn’t vote to make some k00k statement about his support of Amadamnnutjob.

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