President Obama on Saturday defended the recently brokered Iran nuclear deal, arguing that a diplomatic approach was worth pursuing even if a long-term agreement never materializes.
If the six-month deal reached late last month in Geneva to restrict Iran’s nuclear capabilities doesn’t stick, the U.S. and its allies can ratchet up the sanctions they agreed to ease, Obama added.
“If and when Iran shows itself to not be negotiating in good faith, we can reverse [the sanctions] and tighten them even further,” Obama said at the Brookings Institute’s Saban Forum.
The president denounced what he characterized as the “all or nothing” stance taken by critics of the deal, such as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has called for tougher sanctions. “If it turns out we can’t make a deal, we’re no worse off,” Obama said.
While Obama pushed back against the argument that easing sanctions and negotiating with Iran only emboldens the Iranian government in its pursuit of nuclear weapons, he admitted that there is still little trust between Washington and Tehran.









