Edgatown, Massachusetts: President Barack Obama is promising Democratic lawmakers that the US will continue to keep economic pressure on Iran — and keep military options open — if his administration’s nuclear deal with Tehran goes through.

Obama, in a letter addressed to New York Democratic Representative Jerrold Nadler, said that if Iran rushes to build a nuclear weapon, “all of the options available to the United States — including the military option — will remain available.”

The president also says the US will uphold sanctions targeting Iran’s non-nuclear activities, such as its support for Lebanon’s Hezbollah group and what Obama calls Iran’s “destabilising role in Yemen.”

Obama wrote the letter, dated August 19, from Martha’s Vineyard, the tiny island off the Massachusetts coast where he is in the midst of a two-week vacation. While the president has made no public appearances during his vacation, he has been privately reaching out to Democratic lawmakers in a bid to boost support for the Iran deal.

Congress will vote next month on a resolution of disapproval on the accord to curb Iran’s nuclear programme in exchange for billions of dollars in sanctions relief. The president is expected to have to veto the measure, but White House officials and Democratic lawmakers have expressed confidence that there is enough support in the party to block GOP override efforts.

Obama has picked up crucial support from Democrats in recent days, including Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill, who said on Thursday that while the agreement isn’t perfect, it was clear to her that “the world is united behind this agreement with the exception of the government of Israel.”

Nadler, who represents a heavily Jewish congressional district, is among the undecided Democrats. Senator Chuck Schumer, another influential Jewish lawmaker from New York, announced earlier in the month that he would vote against the agreement.

In his letter to Nadler, Obama emphasised US support for Israel, saying he views the country’s security as sacrosanct. He said he was committed to deepening missile defence funding and other military cooperation with Israel

Obama’s letter to Nadler was first obtained by The New York Times.