Washington - Some of the most strident opponents of the nuclear accord with Iran are invoking memories of the Holocaust in an effort to defeat the agreement, arguing the deal could enhance Iran’s ability to build a bomb, leading to the destruction of Israel.
FILE - In this May 13, 2015 file photo, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore, speaks during an interview in his office on Capitol Hill in Washington. Some strident opponents of the nuclear accord with Iran are invoking memories of the Holocaust in an effort to defeat the agreement. Those arguments, however, failed to sway Wyden who grew up hearing stories of the Holocaust firsthand. 'My parents told me at a young age what it was like to live in fear,' said Wyden. 'For German Jews, the fear was always the knock on the door in the night.' Wyden said his parents escaped Germany in the 1930s, but not before both of his grandfathers lost their livelihoods and his father was kicked out of school for being Jewish. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)
Washington - Some of the most strident opponents of the nuclear accord with Iran are invoking memories of the Holocaust in an effort to defeat the agreement, arguing the deal could enhance Iran’s ability to build a bomb, leading to the destruction of Israel.
Those arguments, however, failed to sway two senators who grew up hearing stories of the Holocaust firsthand, despite fierce opposition to the deal from Israeli leaders and some Jewish groups.
“My parents told me at a young age what it was like to live in fear,” said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. “For German Jews, the fear was always the knock on the door in the night.”
Wyden said his parents escaped Germany in the 1930s, but not before both of his grandfathers lost their livelihoods and his father was kicked out of school for being Jewish.... Read More: