
Pompeo Says Current Iran Deal is ‘Not Remotely America First’
Former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo sharply criticized the emerging deal between the United States and Iran late on Saturday, May 23, likening it to the diplomatic approach of a previous administration. Pompeo, who served during President Trump’s first term, charged that the agreement being floated appeared to come “straight out of the Wendy Sherman–Robert Malley–Ben Rhodes playbook,” and accused it of paying Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps to build a weapons program and terrorize the world.
“Not remotely America First,” Pompeo wrote, laying out an alternative course: open the strait, deny Iran access to money, and degrade enough of Tehran’s capability that it can no longer threaten regional allies. He called such steps “overdue.” His intervention added a prominent former official to a growing chorus of Republicans questioning the wisdom of the proposed framework.
The White House pushed back forcefully, with Communications Director Steven Cheung dismissing Pompeo’s criticism and insisting he was not privy to the actual negotiations. Other Republicans echoed Pompeo’s worries, among them Senator Ted Cruz, who voiced his own alarm over reports of the deal. The warnings landed only hours after Trump announced that an agreement had been largely negotiated and that the Strait of Hormuz would be reopened.
(INN/VFI News)
“A prudent man foresees evil and hides himself; the simple pass on and are punished.” – Proverbs 27:12