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Commentary
Washington Times

Biden’s Shady Prisoner Swap with Iran Is Bad for US

Deal only gives our adversaries incentive to hold Americans hostage.

jeremy_hunt
jeremy_hunt
Media Fellow
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Caption
Iranian soldiers march during the annual military parade marking the anniversary of the war with Saddam Hussein's Iraq in the capital Tehran on September 22, 2022. (AFP via Getty Images)

On Aug. 11, the Biden administration publicly announced its negotiation of a prisoner swap with . The exchange would release five Americans unjustly detained in  in return for ‘s access to over $6 billion in oil revenue frozen in South Korea. The prisoner swap itself leaves much to criticize, but what’s worse is the administration’s apparent attempt to mislead the American people.

In a news conference, White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said, “If  were to take de-escalating steps with respect to their nuclear ambitions again, that would all be to the good.” But, he added, “We’re not in active negotiations about the nuclear program.”

According to Mr. Kirby, the prisoner exchange is not connected with any discussion of ’s nuclear capabilities. Contrary to Mr. Kirby’s statements, however, The Wall Street Journal reported that  has reduced its stockpiles of 60% enriched uranium — a key tenet of President ’s previously failed negotiations with .

It is at best highly suspicious that  reduced its nuclear stockpiles just one day after initiating a one-sided prisoner swap that the Biden administration claims has nothing to do with ’s nuclear capabilities.

The truth is that Americans are still mostly in the dark as to what the administration has negotiated with the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism. And Mr. Biden hopes to keep it that way.

The deal is an informal, unwritten, oral agreement, not a formal deal that would warrant congressional oversight. Key parts of the agreement seem to be negotiated verbally — free of any paper trail that could find its way into a congressional hearing.

Further, the deal is being made public in the middle of Congress’ August recess. With most members of Congress at home in their districts, it is unlikely that Congress will be able to exercise its authority to roll back the agreement.

The Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act requires Congress to review any deal related to ’s nuclear capability. The law gives Congress explicit authority to formally disapprove any nuclear-related deal within 30 days of its conclusion and thus prevent the president from moving forward.

In other words, the Biden administration’s perfect timing to evade congressional oversight was not, for lack of a better term, an oversight.

A political play is also in the works. In all likelihood, the deal is Mr. Biden’s attempt to avoid a crisis with  right before his reelection campaign heats up. After a series of foreign policy missteps that have emboldened our adversaries like China and Russia, the president can’t afford the political blowback that would accompany a disastrous outcome in .

Unfortunately for the Biden campaign, this prisoner swap is likely to invite the same nightmare scenario in  that the president seeks to avoid.

Even apart from the shady process in which this prisoner swap was announced, it’s a bad deal on its face. Releasing $6 billion to a murderous regime in exchange for four American hostages isn’t a winning foreign policy strategy. It only gives  incentive to wrongfully hold Americans for ransom.

The former commander-in-chief of ’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — who served in that position for over 17 years — telegraphed ’s strategy in a 2021 interview. He publicly stated that he would hold “1,000 more Americans” hostage to boost ’s economy.

And with last week’s $6 billion deal,  seems to be faring quite well with such a strategy. 

Senior Biden administration officials may hope to negotiate in secret, away from public scrutiny, but they would do well to at least consider the perspective of those who know what it’s like to be held hostage by the regime in .

Kylie Moore-Gilbert, an Australian-British academic who was wrongfully detained for 804 days in one of ’s most notorious prisons, derided ’s ransom payment to , saying that “such a payment will only incentivize ‘s hostage diplomacy further,” endangering “the lives of even more foreign and dual nationals visiting .”

As a former hostage with experience of ’s brutal regime, Ms. Moore-Gilbert sees what all Americans should see: There is only one winner in this U.S.- prisoner swap, and it’s not the United States.

At a minimum, Americans ought to expect two things from our country’s commander in chief: transparency and common sense. President ’s&Բ; policy delivers neither.