Obama admin seeks pause in new Iran sanctions push

The Obama administration is asking Congress to hold off on enacting new sanctions against Iran.

Washington: The Obama administration is asking Congress to hold off on enacting new sanctions against Iran.

It says a pause in the push to impose new penalties would give negotiators flexibility in talks now under way to get Iran to comply with demands it prove its nuclear program is peaceful.

Even as US officials argue that tough sanctions are what brought Iran to the negotiating table in the first place, the White House and State Department said yesterday the administration wants lawmakers to wait on new sanctions legislation to give the negotiations time to get traction.

Some lawmakers have argued that now is not the time to ease pressure and that pursuing new sanctions will give the US additional leverage in the talks.

But, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said it was the consensus of the administration`s national security teams that a pause "would be helpful in terms of providing some flexibility while we see if these negotiations will move forward." She said the position was delivered to lawmakers and congressional aides at a White House meeting on Thursday.

"We have conveyed that any congressional action should be aligned with our negotiating strategy as we move forward. So while we understand that Congress may consider new sanctions, we think this is a time for a pause, as we asked for in the past, to see if negotiations can gain traction," Psaki told reporters.

She noted that additional sanctions can always be imposed later if the Iranians fail to meet their obligations, and she stressed that no existing sanctions are being lifted.

At the White House, national security council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said the negotiations would not last indefinitely without progress and movement from Iran, which has long defied international demands to come clean about its nuclear intentions.

"The window for negotiation is not open-ended, and if progress isn`t made, there may be a time when more sanctions are, in fact, necessary," Hayden said. "We have always said that there would be no agreement overnight, and we`ve been clear that this process is going to take some time."

Bipartisan pressure in Congress to ramp up sanctions on Iran has been rising for some time and hit a new high last week after negotiators from the United States, the other four permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany met with Iranian officials in Geneva.

The chief US negotiator, Wendy Sherman, told Congress before those talks that the administration would support tougher sanctions on Iran if it didn`t come to the Geneva talks with "concrete, substantive actions" and a verifiable plan to scale back its nuclear program.

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