The Iran Deal Violations  Begin - By Jonathan Tobin -
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/1015/tobin101215.php3 
Throughout  the debate over the Iran nuclear deal, critics of the agreement did more than  point out its weaknesses. They also argued that given Iran's long record of  violating existing agreements, it was almost certain that Tehran would ignore  many, if not most of its restrictions at the first opportunity. 
This  claim was pooh-poohed by President Obama and his supporters who asserted that  the safeguards in the pact would prevent cheating. 
More  importantly, the mindset behind the decision to essentially grant international  approval to Iran's nuclear program was based on the notion that the Islamist  regime could be trusted and would, given enough encouragement, ultimately change  to become a partner for the West. 
The  jaw-dropping naïveté that was the foundation of administration policy is part  of what led to what polls showed to be most of the American people and large  majorities in both the House and the Senate to oppose the deal (though not  enough, thanks to partisan Democrats, to stop it). 
But  critics didn't have to wait long for their predictions to start coming true.  
As  the New York Times reported, Iran announced a long-range missile test in  violation of the restrictions on their missile program that was promised by the  administration. 
One  of the many shortcomings of the nuclear deal was its failure to address Iran's  building of intercontinental ballistic missiles, a weapons system that  illustrated that their nuclear program was a threat to the United States as much  as it was to Israel. But the deal did leave in place the restrictions on missile  testing. 
Indeed,  the United Nations Security Council resolution that lifted most of the sanctions  on Iran (prior to Obama sneaking the deal through Congress) left in place  previous the measures previously passed that made missile tests illegal. Thus,  the announcement by Iran's state news agency that the test of their Emad guided  missile is an obvious violation of the deal. 
Yet  what is most significant about this event is that it allows us to see exactly  how the nuclear deal will function in the future. 
Given  the ferocity of administration promises about safeguards and holding Iran  accountability that we heard during the debate on the deal, we might expect  serious consequences to result from the missile launch. But anyone who really  thinks that will happen hasn't been paying attention. 
What's  next? 
The  administration will express concern but also attempt to muddy the waters about  the agreement saying, as the Times article implied that there was some doubt  about whether the restrictions still apply. 
The  missile test will be widely interpreted as being merely a function of internal  Iranian political arguments between hardliners opposed to the deal and  "moderates" in favor of it. The test will be dismissed as meaningless and any  attempt to hold Iran accountable for its misbehavior will be branded as a  Western provocation that would destroy trust inside Iran and hurt the  "moderates." 
In  other words, we will be told to move along and there is nothing to see here.  
But  there is something very important going on. 
The  Emad is a clear technological step up from Iran's existing Shahab-3 missile and  is a direct threat to Israel. While Iran speaks of its armaments as defensive in  nature and a deterrent against the Jewish state, we should remember one thing.  Israel has no policy aimed at destroying Iran. It is Iran's leaders who  repeatedly threaten Israel with extinction. 
The  process, by which Iran will move, either slowly or quickly to a nuclear weapon  with a weapons system that can deliver such a bomb, begins with establishing its  ability to violate the nuclear deal with impunity. Once smaller violations are  allowed to pass without consequences, we have taken a first irrevocable step  down the road to the acceptance of an Iranian bomb that is implicit in the  adoption of the nuclear deal. If those who supported the deal do not respond  with vehement denunciations and pressure, but instead use the same weak  arguments to justify the violations that they used to support the agreement,  then the Islamist regime will know that other violations will be treated in the  same fashion. 
Of  course, Iran also knows that it can get to a bomb rather easily once the deal  expires in a decade since its nuclear infrastructure and advanced research has  been left in place. But if cheating along the edges of the deal is okay with the  Obama administration, then there's no reason for them to wait or to at least to  start the kind of development that will make a bomb and a capable delivery  system inevitable. That means that rather than being a minor violation that  doesn't affect the main thrust of the deal, the missile test is a benchmark by  which everything that follows will be judged. 
In  that sense it is not so much the Iranian missiles that are being tested as the  Obama administration and its liberal cheering section in the media. Given their  track record, there's not much doubt that they will fail.
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