Senators react to Trump’s Iran peace deal: ‘What an embarrassment’
Republican and Democrat senators react to President Donald Trump’s memorandum of understanding (MOU), with lawmakers from both parties criticizing the agreement and raising concerns about its potential impact.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.
My initial reaction is that this blunder means that there may be changes in the administration. The MOU has so many holes and gaps, it puts Iran in a much stronger position than before this war, and what strikes me is not only the hundreds of billions of dollars that are going to go to Iran that it can use to fund its proxies or its rebuilding of its military, but also the complete lack of any verification or inspection. They're going to rely on the United Nations to do oversight and verification that's worse than no verification at all, and I voted for the JCPOA after struggling with questions involving unfreezing assets, verification resources going to Iran, and Trump seems to just blow right through these issues. I think there has to be a lot of soul searching in this administration. Hegseth should go. This military operation has had some tactical success, but he has over promised and under delivered, and Hegseth ought to go.
- Sen. Richard Blumenthal to Fox News Digital
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.:
"Some of the criticism of the MOU is valid, I think, but here's the way I look at it: Without the MOU being signed, there is no pathway to diplomacy to end the nuclear ambitions of Iran. What does that leave you with? War, continuation of the status quo. So the upside of signing the MOU was greater, I think, than the downside. The deal itself is the big prize. If it's a bad deal, I'll say so in my view. I'm hoping it will be much better than JCPOA, but the real prize is, can you expand Abraham Accords after you deal with Iran the way we have. Oct. 7 was designed to stop normalization between Saudi and Israel, because in the eyes of Iran that was a nightmare."
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C.:
"Now we've got 60 days to see what the details look like, and I'm cautiously optimistic. I'm glad the markets are responding well, but the markets are ultimately going to be responding to the details that we all need to see."
Sen. John Kennedy, R-La.:
"Let's give peace a chance. I think that's all the president is saying. I read the document last night, and I've heard all of the speculation, and what about this, and what about that, and what if this happens, one, if that doesn't happen, we'll know in 60 days.
"Let's give us 60 days to give peace a chance, and that's all he's saying."
Fox News' Nicholas Ballasy and Hannah Brennan contributed to this report.
Posted by Eric Mack