US Senate Democrats blocked legislation meant to kill the Iran nuclear deal for a third time today, securing perhaps the greatest foreign policy of President Barack Obama's six years in office and clearing the way for the agreement's implementation.

By a vote of 56-42, the Republican-majority Senate fell short of the 60 votes needed in the 100-member chamber to advance the legislation as all but four of Obama's fellow Democrats backed the nuclear pact announced in July.

With no more Senate votes planned this week, the result ensured that Congress will not pass a resolution of disapproval that would have crippled the agreement by eliminating Obama's ability to waive many U.S. sanctions.

A disapproval resolution would have had to pass both the Senate and House of Representativesby midnight on Thursday, and survive Obama's veto, to be enacted.

The Senate's Republican majority leader, Mitch McConnell, held three votes trying to advance the disapproval measure, but failed to lure any more Democrats into voting for it after it first came up in the Senate a week ago.

After the first two failed, he sought to increase the political stakes surrounding the issue by adding an amendment that would have barred Obama from easing any sanctions on Iran unlessTehran released Americans held prisoner in the country and recognized Israel's right to exist.

With Democrats objecting to adding non-nuclear issues to consideration of the nuclear deal, that procedural vote was 53-45, meaning the measure failed to attract the 60 votes it would need to advance. 

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