In 2010 and 2011, Paul says he spent eight months in Sudan trying to
persuade President Omar al-Bashir to sacrifice 60 percent of the
government’s wealth and 30 percent of its land to the Christian-majority
southern part of the country. Ultimately, Bashir allowed a referendum
for southern Sudan to secede and become an independent country. Paul
laments that Sudan, despite its sacrifice, hasn’t seen the sanctions
relief that America promised the African nation would receive — yet $150
billion in sanctions relief is coming Iran’s way in the nuclear deal.
Though the deal was signed under the watch of current Secretary of State John Kerry, the Wall Street Journal reported last year that Hillary Clinton, in her last months as secretary of state, “helped open the door to…an acceptance that Tehran would maintain at least some capacity to produce nuclear fuel.” The report cited a “string of high-level meetings” in 2012 in which “the secretary of state and White House concluded that they
might have to let Iran continue to enrich uranium at small levels, if the diplomacy had any hope of succeeding.”
Though the deal was signed under the watch of current Secretary of State John Kerry, the Wall Street Journal reported last year that Hillary Clinton, in her last months as secretary of state, “helped open the door to…an acceptance that Tehran would maintain at least some capacity to produce nuclear fuel.” The report cited a “string of high-level meetings” in 2012 in which “the secretary of state and White House concluded that they
might have to let Iran continue to enrich uranium at small levels, if the diplomacy had any hope of succeeding.”
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