The academics join a growing chorus in support of the deal, including a joint letter, also released Thursday, from more than 70 U.S. organizations calling on Congress to take the path of “diplomacy, not war.”

The missives come as Congress nears the conclusion of its August recess, after which it will hold a key vote on whether to approve the deal, which was reached between Iran, the United States, Russia, China, United Kingdom, France, Germany, and the European Union in mid-July. As per recently-passed legislation, the U.S. House and Senate were given a total of 60 days to review the final accord.

Amid a well-heeled campaign to reject the diplomatic agreement—backed by legislative hawks, AIPAC, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu—people in Iran, the United States, and across the world have been escalating a campaign in support of the deal. 

In an article published last week, Chomsky argued that the rogue nations that actually pose the “gravest threat” to world peace: the U.S., Israel, and Saudi Arabia.

Meanwhile, organizers in the Iranian diaspora have staged rallies around the world backing the agreement, and numerous Iranian dissidents, former political prisoners, and civil society organizers, have thrown their weight behind the pact, which they argue paves the way to much-needed relief from devastating sanctions and government repression.

In the words of Fakhrossadat Mohtashamipour, activist and wife of Iranian political Prisoner Mostafa Tajzadeh: “The highest cost imposed by the sanctions is paid by the people, particularly the low-income and vulnerable groups.”

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