In this week’s fact-checking video, CNN’s Jake Tapper examines several claims from President Donald Trump’s remarks after an Iranian missile attack on military bases in Iraq housing U.S. coalition forces.
Trump also was wrong when he claimed that as a part of the deal, Iran
was “given $150 billion, not to mention $1.8 billion in cash.” Trump
frequently distorts this point, but as we explained once again last year, the deal unfroze some of Iran’s assets that were held largely in foreign
banks due to U.S. sanctions. A Treasury Department official in 2015
testified that that would allow Iran to access about $50 billion in
“usable liquid assets.”
The $1.8 billion in cash that Trump mentioned is from an unrelated
settlement reached by the Obama administration to resolve a dispute that
dates to 1979, when Iran paid the U.S. $400 million for military equipment it never received. The U.S. agreed in 2016 to repay Iran that sum, with interest, for a total of $1.7 billion.
Finally, Trump made the dubious claim that “The missiles fired last
night at us and our allies were paid for with the funds made available
by the last administration.” Experts told us that prior to the nuclear
deal, Iran already possessed many of the type of missiles used in the
retaliatory attack. A researcher at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies told us he had “strong
doubts” that Iran’s missile development — which has long been a high
priority for the country’s supreme leader — was “affected too much by
budget fluctuations.”
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