The One Question the Media Wouldn't Ask at the White House Press Briefing...
Here's the Question That Really Got Under Tim Walz's Skin
Trump Is About to Tell Us Which Candidate He Wants for Texas Senate
Legendary Notre Dame Football Coach Lou Holtz Has Died Aged 89
Jim Jordan Exposed Tim Walz's Dishonesty at Oversight Committee Hearing on Minnesota Fraud
Senator Kennedy Shares His Honest, and Funny, Thoughts on the Death of Khamenei
Wyoming Sheriffs Have Problem Preserving Second Amendment
Iranian Women's Rights Activist Calls Out Kamala Harris Silence on Regime's Atrocities: 'W...
Despite What Democrats May Tell You, Americans Want the SAVE Act
Victor Davis Hanson Explains Why This Time The War in the Middle East...
Kurdish Forces in Iraq Have Launched a Ground Invasion Against Iran
Iran's Last Hope Is American Division
Honduran National Sentenced to 6.5 Years for Assaulting ICE Officer in Oklahoma City
U.S. Senate Rejects Measure to Halt Strikes on Iran
Japanese National Who Allegedly Tried to Sell Plutonium to Fake Iranian General Sentenced...
Tipsheet

A Fresh START? Not So Fast.

A Fresh START? Not So Fast.
Republican Senator Jon Kyl has slammed the breaks on President Obama's START treaty with Russia.  He says any Senate consideration of the agreement must wait until the new Congress is seated, although
Advertisement
"good faith" negotiations remain underway:

One of President Obama's top foreign-policy goals suffered a potentially ruinous setback when the Senate's second-ranking Republican said the U.S. nuclear treaty with Russia should not be considered until next year.

The statement Tuesday by Sen. Jon Kyl (Ariz.) stunned the White House and Democrats, who scrambled to save the pact. It came just days after Obama declared that ratifying the treaty was his top foreign-policy priority for the lame-duck session of Congress.

The New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) needs 67 votes to pass. Because of Democratic losses in the midterm elections, it would be harder to approve next year, requiring at least 14 Republican votes rather than nine now.

 
The "stunned" White House is pressing Kyl for a deal today, as Vice President Biden released a statement warning that a failure to ratify the treaty would "endanger national security."  For a thorough explanation of why the deal actually represents a US national security poison pill, read John Bolton's May essay at NRO.  President Obama, meanwhile, has pledged to Russian President Dmitri Medvedev that adopting the treaty -- which the president has
Advertisement
already signed -- is a "top priority" for his administration:

President Barack Obama, capping a far-flung Asian trip of mixed results, assured Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Sunday that getting the Senate to ratify the START nuclear weapons treaty is a "top priority" of his administration.

"I reiterated my commitment to getting the START treaty done during the lame-duck session," Obama said, noting that Congress returns next week for its postelection session. 

Given Obama's liberal use of that particular phrase, his assurances may be cold comfort to Moscow.

UPDATE:  White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told reporters today that the president is willing to meet with Sen. Kyl to advance the START effort, and said he's still confident the treaty will pass during the lame duck session.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement