views commentary reaction Wrong Man? Right Decision! continued from page 8 I t took him 16 months to get be to carry the nukes it lied about not around to it, but U.S. President wanting to build. Donald Trump finally kept another Thanks to the free pass Obama gave campaign promise and pulled the Iran in Syria, it not only enabled the United States out of the Iran nuclear barbarous survival of Syrian President deal. To his critics, especially Bashar Assad’s regime, but the Obama administration allowed the establishment of alumni who have dedicated Iranian bases there to further themselves to defending the threaten Israel and moderate 44th president’s foreign-policy Arab regimes. legacy, the move is quintes- Yet Trump’s critics still sential Trump: irresponsible, claim that the deal was only impulsive, politically moti- focused on nuclear issues, vated, and rooted in ignorance and that for all its flaws, Jonathan S. and malice. the agreement stalled that Tobin But while Trump can be all threat. They assert that those things and more, the Trump is making it easier for narrative that his Iran policy Iran to go back to preparing is a foolish departure from to break out to build a bomb the wise efforts of his predecessor is with no “plan B” to ensure how it will false. Think what you like of Trump be stopped. the man and his relentless Twitter Those who believe Trump is wrong account. Yet for all of his faults, in are making the same mistake that making what may well turn out to Obama made in the negotiations. be the most significant decision of Obama acted as if he needed a deal his presidency, Trump not only did more than Iran and then abandoned the right thing, but also exposed the all of the West’s demands that it give intellectual bankruptcy of the sup- up its nuclear quest one by one. As posed adults in Washington, the U.S. a result, Iran got to keep its program foreign-policy establishment and and advanced research capabilities America’s European allies. and also forced the United States to Though the way forward may well agree to sunset provisions that will be difficult and fraught with peril, by mean that within 10 to 15 years, all of taking the first formal step to reverse the restrictions on their nuclear capa- former President Barack Obama’s bilities will expire. effort to appease the Islamist regime, Even if there were no other flaws Trump has demonstrated that he has in the deal — and there are many — a surer grasp of how to defend U.S. that one alone would have justified national security — and that of our Trump’s decision since a failure to allies — than all the people who are renegotiate the JCPOA is tantamount assumed to be smarter than him. to conceding that Iran will get a To understand why requires not nuclear weapon sooner or later. only an explanation of how deeply Unlike Obama, Trump understands flawed the nuclear pact is, but why that Iran is the weaker player in those who claim that it’s working just this confrontation, not the United fine (and who predict that Trump is States. While it may threaten to start plunging the world into a crisis) are building a weapon, doing so would wrong. force the Europeans — and even The first point to be made about the Russians and the Chinese — to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of back Trump. That would accelerate a Action (JCPOA) is that it didn’t fulfill return to international sanctions and Obama’s 2012 campaign promise to isolate them again. With unrest inside end the threat of an Iranian nuclear Iran building — both from anger over weapon. Instead, Obama’s despera- the theocracy’s impact on the lives tion to make a deal at any price — a of ordinary Iranians, and frustration desire rooted in the president’s belief over the Islamist tyranny’s incompe- that détente with Tehran was both tence and corrupt management of the possible and desirable — resulted in economy — there is no way the aya- granting the Iranian nuclear program tollahs will roll the dice in a standoff an international seal of approval. It with the Americans in that way. enriched and empowered the Islamist Trump is calling their bluff, and he regime and granted it an undeserved is right to do so. legitimacy. But rather than “get right That means the immediate danger with the world,” as Obama promised, of an Iranian breakout is unlikely to Iran used the massive cash windfall materialize. Once that’s clear, the in unfrozen assets and the lifting of administration can begin tightening sanctions to ramp up its aggressive the noose on Iran’s economy by not behavior, as well as continue building only re-imposing U.S. sanctions, as missiles whose only purpose would Trump has done, but also by warning 10 May 17 • 2018 jn other nations, including America’s European allies, that anyone who does business with Iran will not be able to conduct transactions with U.S. financial institutions. The French and the Germans will scream, but they would have no choice but to comply. As much as the president’s critics argue that he has forfeited America’s role as leader of the free world with his behavior, his policies make it clear that it is Trump — and not the seem- ingly more respectable Emmanuel Macron or level-headed Angela Merkel — who is defending the West. In other words, although Obama apologists and the Europeans have kept telling us that there’s no way that America can start to roll back the deal on its own, Trump is about to do just that. And it will not only unravel the nuclear deal, but also begin reversing the gains Iran has made in the last four years as its prestige rose and its coffers began to fill. Sooner or later, as Trump predicted, Iran will have no choice but to talk about a new nucle- ar deal that will, in contrast to the pathetic show put on by Obama and former Secretary of State John Kerry, be on America’s terms, not that of the ayatollahs. Far from endangering U.S. secu- rity, Trump’s move was the first step toward averting the peril that Obama’s shortsighted effort at appeasement created. Are there risks associated with this strategy? Of course, there are. But they are not as great as the risks, both long- and short-term, that Obama’s deal cre- ated. As was the case with his decision to reverse Obama’s campaign to cre- ate more daylight between the United States and Israel — and to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of the Jewish state — Trump has dismissed the conventional wisdom of the so-called experts. His instinctual distrust of the establishment was not a manifesta- tion of his ignorance, but a recogni- tion that they were, as they have been for decades, dead wrong. There are still many good reasons to distrust Trump and to be disgusted by his personal behavior. But hard as it may be for those who despise him to admit, on Iran — as on Israel and Jerusalem — he has done the right thing. As his efforts to stop the rogue regime in Tehran continue, those who oppose this strategy will deserve our scorn. Not Trump. • Jonathan S. Tobin is editor in chief of JNS — Jewish News Syndicate. cooperation in military facilities with North Korea made it impossible for the United States to certify, as the JCPOA requires, that a) Iran is “transparently, verifiably and fully implementing” the agreement; and b) “has not taken any action, including covert activities, that could significantly advance its nuclear weapons program. “France, Germany and the United Kingdom have made intensive efforts to bring Iran closer to compliance, but they failed. “Withdrawal from the JCPOA is not the end of the process. The president and America’s allies must find ways to protect the United States, Europe, and the Middle East from Iranian aggression — both nuclear and non-nuclear. But we believe President Trump has taken a decision that is responsive to the situ- ation and vital to the national security interests of the United States.” The Jewish Policy Center is a Conservative-leaning think tank based in Washington, D.C. • CORRECTIONS In the story “Chaos / Control,” page 36 in the May 3 issue, it should have said that artist Rene Lichtman was among the founders of the groups Hidden Child/ Child Survivors and World Federation of Jewish Child Survivors of the Holocaust. In the story “Hope Not Handcuffs” (May 10, page 16), the name of attorney Amy Wechsler was misspelled. Her husband is Don Wechsler. Yiddish Limerick SHAVUOT Mir alle in Sinai Gevain Un Moishe Rabbeinu gezayn. Un “Naase v’nishma” we said with no fear Mir Yidn, we hold undzer Torah so dear. And on Shvuos to shul mir vel gayn. Mir alle: we all Gevayn: were Un Moishe Rabbeinu Gezayn: and Moses our Rabbi saw Naase v’nishma: We’ll do and we’ll hear Mi Yidn: we Jews Undzer: our Shvuos: Shavuot Mir vel gayn: we will go. By Rachel Kapen