WASHINGTON – The starkly different ways in which Minnetonka residents Andrew Parker and Mehr Jay Shahidi view the historic nuclear deal with Iran provides the emotional backdrop for what is shaping up to be the most important foreign policy debate of Barack Obama's presidency.
The White House and congressional Democrats say the agreement is the only alternative to what would be another eventual war in the Middle East. That's a view shared by Shahidi, a 68-year-old businessman who was born in Iran but has lived in the United States for 48 years and has gone back to his homeland seven times. Shahidi still has relatives in Iran and hears from them weekly about the toll of economic sanctions.
"We need to give them a chance to open up by increasing trade and travel," Shahidi said. "That's how we bring them back into the world."
But critics, including Minnesota's Republicans and many prominent Jewish community members, say the United States is giving away powerful leverage to an enemy and escalating regional tensions in the Middle East — including, most important, Israel.
This is what resonates with Parker, 54, a partner at a Minneapolis law firm and a longtime Israel supporter.
"They're [Iran] responsible for more U.S. deaths than perhaps any other country in the last 50 years," he said. "Even during negotiations, they were in the streets, by the thousands, chanting 'death to America.' That's what we're dealing with."
In the final working days on Capitol Hill last week, Obama administration officials embarked on an aggressive campaign to sell the deal's virtues. For Minnesota's delegation, this included hours of classified briefings with the president's Cabinet, visits to the Situation Room and personal phone calls from administration officials.
The accord reached earlier this month by the Obama administration, European allies and Iran says that in exchange for heavy monitoring and suppression of the country's blossoming nuclear program, the U.S. and its allies will ease up on heavy economic sanctions crippling Iran's economy. Congress will vote on whether to support the agreement in September, after a four-week August recess.