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Republicans in Washington on edge over Iran deal as Trump touts its merits

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President Donald Trump is framing a tentative peace deal with Iran as a victory for the U.S., but fractures in the Republican Party suggest that could be a hard sell both on Capitol Hill and in the run-up to November’s midterm elections. “It’s a very strong deal,” Trump said at the G7 summit in France on Wednesday, seated across from Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. “Nobody knows what it is, but it’s very strong.” The early response from Republican leaders and the conservative commentariat is mixed at best, in part because not everyone has had a chance yet to digest the memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the two countries. Most Republicans agree that the administration “has taken steps” to diminish Iran as “an existential threat,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., told reporters Tuesday before the White House released the bullet points. “I’m hoping that when we get more information about the memorandum of understanding, we’ll have a better sense about what the path forward is.” With Trump under pressure from Republicans wary of forever wars and those worried about inflation ahead of the midterm elections, the short-term gain for consumers and candidates is the MOU, which promises a tentative end to hostilities and a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Administration officials believe that will bring down prices for gas and other goods as freighters flow freely again through a major conduit in the global supply chain. But cutting a preliminary deal to immediately reopen a seaway that was clear when the U.S. launched the war in late February — without ensuring enriched uranium is removed, effecting regime change or continuing to squeeze Tehran’s economy — is a “low-grade humiliation” for the president, a person close to the White House said. Most of the remaining items have been punted to follow-on negotiations that are expected to take place after the memorandum is finalized this weekend. “It’s an embarrassing way to get out of this, but I think everyone just wants to get out of it,” this person said. The White House defended the agreement in a statement, saying it strengthens U.S. interests and national security and will help drive down energy costs. “Following the historic destruction of Iran’s military capabilities through the successful Operation Epic Fury, President Trump and his negotiating team have brokered an excellent MOU that advances the interests of the United States by ending the fighting, reopening the Strait of Hormuz to significantly lower energy prices, and forcing Iran to commit to abandon its nuclear ambitions,” White House spokeswoman Olivia Wales said. “What the President has achieved on the battlefield and at the negotiating table is nothing short of remarkable and will strengthen American security for many years to come.” What Netanyahu thinks of Trump's Iran deal A more comprehensive pact remains as elusive as it is politically fraught for the president. As much as voters want the U.S. out of Iran — and polls consistently show that they do — the price of getting Tehran to abandon its nuclear ambitions is giving the regime access to money. That’s a cost that many of the president’s supporters don’t want to bear, and it’s one that GOP candidates may have to wrestle with if a final agreement is ever reached. “If this is true, Iran wins,” Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations during Trump’s first term, wrote on X on Tuesday after The Wall Street Journal reported that sanctions on Iranian oil would be lifted immediately as part of the MOU. “There should be zero sanctions relief day one.” The memorandum released by the White House includes an agreement by the U.S. to waive sanctions on Iranian oil, which a senior administration official said Wednesday would end an effective subsidy for China to buy oil from Iran. Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, whose views generally differ from Haley’s, also criticized the economic sanctions reversal on his “War Room” podcast on Tuesday. “Keep the sanctions, because if we lose that, it will take forever to get back,” he said, adding that the president should not unfreeze billions of dollars in captured Iranian assets as the memorandum envisions. “Just walk away, but keep their money.” Those concerns come as even top Republican leaders on Capitol Hill are just learning about the details of the pact. Still, GOP lawmakers are divided over whether now is the time to end the war, according to Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo. “I think you have a couple of camps,” Schmitt said. “You have the camp that wants us to lose. And then you have the camp that wants a forever war. And President Trump is not in either one of those camps. And neither am I.” Presidents are typically reluctant to be the face of policies that split their base, and Trump is no different. That means the job of selling the plan to the public may eventually fall more fully on Vice President JD Vance, who was the lead negotiator for the U.S., and Trump’s most stalwart supporters in Congress. The announcement of a deal coincided with the launch of a Vance media tour to promote his new book, making him a more frequent TV presence than usual. “It’s going to be interesting to observe as all of the people who pushed hardest for the war and celebrated the president’s sublime judgment are now going to hate the deal,” one person close to the administration said. “And they’re going to turn on Vance because he’s a useful proxy because they don’t want to turn on the president.” Among Trump’s top advisers, Vance was the most hesitant about the launch of the war at the end of February, but the president designated him to help bring an end to it, along with envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law. So far, that has yielded the MOU. A senior administration official said Trump, who has been meeting with world leaders this week at a G7 summit in Geneva, will be fully engaged in pitching the MOU to the American people. “The alternative would be a worldwide depression,” Trump said in Geneva, citing the economic devastation wrought by Tehran’s closure of the strait, which was precipitated by U.S. military strikes on Iran and followed by an American naval blockade that prevented Iran from using the waterway while blocking access to others. Some in Trump’s orbit are optimistic that the reviews will improve once the full impact is felt. “People are understandably focused on the immediate provisions of the deal, but the president’s approach is centered on the long-term strategic position of the U.S.,” one person familiar with the administration’s perspective said. “The broader objective is to strengthen American influence, reinforce critical defense and technology partnerships, maintain U.S. leadership against competitors such as China and Russia, and create durable advantages that may not always be apparent in the initial public debate.” Several Republican aides who spoke with NBC News said early reporting of its contents exacerbated tensions within the caucus between those who want to wrap the war as soon as possible to mitigate the political impacts at home and those committed to seeing the conflict advance their long-standing foreign policy aims. The final text lined up closely with earlier versions that circulated through capitals around the globe in recent days. “Obviously everybody wants this to be over,” one aide to a Senate Republican said, adding that the White House has asked senators for backup in defending the new agreement. “Gas prices are way too high. This is a politically toxic issue.” However, this person said they were concerned that the deal would be too similar to the Obama-era nuclear deal with Iran, called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, that Republicans pilloried for years. Trump withdrew from the JCPOA during his first term and has sought to push back on the idea that the agreements are similar. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., who speaks frequently with the president and is among hi