WASHINGTON Rules without enforcement dont mean much.
Thats the new tone AIPAC and its supporters on Capitol Hill are taking when it comes to Iran sanctions.
Last week, congressional appropriators close to AIPAC moved to introduce enforcement language that would penalize federal agencies that contract with companies doing business with the Islamic Republic.
If the existing lock on the door was not doing the job, this is a much more powerful lock were placing on the door of companies who would want to do business with Iran, said US Rep. Steve Rothman (D-NJ), who is pushing the language with fellow US House of Representatives appropriators, Reps. Steve Israel (D-NY) and Mark Kirk (R-Ill.).
All three are known for close ties to the Jewish state.
Setting the wheels in motion for the new legislation was the revelation in the New York Times on March 6 that sanctions busters had garnered $107 billion in US government money for procurement business, grants and loans.
In a rare move for a lobby best known for its behind-the-scenes profile, AIPAC sent letters to every member of Congress expressing its outrage over the sanctions violations.
These ongoing financial dealings undermine longstanding American efforts to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapons capability, the letter said.
While Presidents Clinton, Bush and Obama may have discouraged some investment in Iran through their rhetoric, the US has sent the American and international business community a contradictory message by failing to enforce the law.
AIPACS letter has had an effect.
Rothman said he already was planning action as soon as he read the story, but the calls and emails he received made it a must-do. My Blackberry was burning, he said.
Rep. Israel raised the issue with Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner on March 25 in a hearing of the foreign operations subcommittee of the Appropriations Committee.
Geithner was receptive.
We would be open to any effective means for bringing greater pressure to bear on this government, he said.
We share your commitment to this and well work with you to explore any feasible means to bring greater pressure to bear on this government.
Rep. Israel later said he was satisfied.
The administration clearly got the message, he said, noting that Obamas predecessor, President George W. Bush, had not enforced the sanctions for both of his terms. I dont want to proclaim victory yet; we still have work to do.
The legislation would attach limiting amendments to all 12 budget bills that Congress must pass, preventing funds from going to companies that engage in activity eligible for sanctions or own or control any party that engages in such activity.
This latter practice was a common dodge by US-owned companies to enable foreign-owned subsidiaries to deal with Iran.
The legislation came the same week that AIPAC drew 7,500 attendees to its annual policy conference.
AIPAC activists lobbied March 23 for final passage of bills to enhance sanctions in existence since the mid 1990s.
Bills have passed in the House and Senate and are now undergoing reconciliation.
The existing sanctions banned most US business dealings with Iran. Yet, the Times found in its March 6 report, 49 US companies were doing business with Iran, and those doing business with Irans energy sector had gotten $15 billion.
The existing sanctions restrict access to US markets for foreign entities doing business with Irans energy sector.
The enhanced sanctions would outright ban US business with any entity doing business with Irans energy sector and would also target Irans financial sector.
The sanctions also would reduce the $20 million ceiling for overseas companies doing such business to $1 million. The idea is to force overseas markets into a choice between trading with the US or with Iran.
The New York Times revelations were a bitter pill for AIPACs activists.
The flagrant violation of the 1996 bill that AIPAC had been instrumental in supporting was a damper for AIPAC activists famous for their enthusiasm.
Its frustrating, a dead end, said Debbie Farnoush, 26, from Los Angeles and a founder of the Iranian-American group 30 Years After. I feel like were not going anywhere.
Still, she said, she wasnt going to give up. The US needs to be more aggressive, she said.
Bruce Wiener, another activist, was optimistic about the prospect of tougher enforcement.
Most members of Congress are sympathetic, he said. Its not a matter of convincing; its a matter of implementing.
Keith Weissman, who headed AIPACs Iran desk until 2005, said that Clinton administration officials made it clear to him from the beginning that the bill was never going to be enforced because it crimped US trade with foreign businesses.
Clintons 1995 executive order banning business with Irans energy sector had been enforced for a short period, and had spooked the oil industry enough that the 1996 bill was used as leverage but never in deed.
Part of the problem, Weissman said, was that after years of threatening and not implementing, companies that wanted to deal with Iran realized the US government was crying wolf.
Once it was clear they werent going to enforce it, it wasnt going to work any more, Weissman said.
Weissman and his boss, Steve Rosen, were fired by AIPAC in 2005 under pressure from prosecutors seeking an indictment against the men for relaying national security information to journalists, colleagues and Israeli diplomats.
The prosecution dropped the case a year ago after the presiding judge ruled that much of the governments case violated constitutional principles, including free speech rights.
Weissman, who no longer believes sanctions to be effective, said the amendments now under consideration would create a cumbersome bureaucracy, with multiple US agencies vetting hundreds of businesses.
What, are you going to vet the company that provides food to soldiers, that helps export oil from Iraq, that caters parties at the Baghdad embassy? he asked.
Rep. Israel dismisses the idea that the amendments are unworkable.
There can be no argument that once a law is passed and signed by the president that its too complicated to enforce, he said.
Whether its a contract, a grant or a loan, whether its a penny, a dime or a dollar, we will not allow them to spend the money.
Eric Fingerhut and Melissa Apter contributed to this story.