French President Emmanuel Macron had shuttled between his US and Iranian counterparts over two days at the United Nations, trying to arrange a historic encounter that he hoped could reduce the risk of all-out war in the Middle East.
But Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, addressing the UN General Assembly, said he would refuse talks so long as the United States maintains its economic pressure.
“I would like to announce that our response to any negotiation under sanctions is negative,” Rouhani said.
He dismissed the idea of a photo-op with Trump, who is fond of drama and held three made-for-television meetings with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
“Memento photos are the final stage of negotiations, not the first one,” he said. He doubted the sincerity of the Trump administration to negotiate, pointing to officials’ boasts of applying “the harshest sanctions in history” against Iran. “How can someone believe them when the silent killing of a great nation, and pressure on the lives of 83 million Iranians, especially women and children, are welcomed by American government officials?”
“The Iranian nation will never, ever forget and forgive these crimes and these criminals,” he said.
Targeting Iran through China
Trump had already ruled out easing economic pressure and, hours before Rouhani’s speech, his administration said it was stepping up sanctions.
On Trump’s last scheduled day at the annual UN summit of world leaders, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the United States would punish Chinese companies and their chief executives for buying Iranian oil.
“We’re telling China, and all nations — know that we will sanction every violation of sanctions of all activity,” Pompeo told a pressure group opposed to Iran’s clerical regime on the sidelines of the United Nations.
China, which is embroiled in a trade war as well as myriad other disputes with the United States, is believed to be the biggest foreign buyer of Iranian oil.
The Trump administration in May said it would unilaterally force all countries to stop buying Iran’s oil, its major export, sending tensions soaring.
The United States blamed Iran for an attack earlier this month on the oil infrastructure of rival Saudi Arabia, which is also waging a devastating offensive in Yemen.
France, Britain and Germany this week said they agreed with the US findings. “Some have said that they’ve joined the United States; I think they have joined reality,” Pompeo said of the Europeans.
Seeking to salvage deal
But the European powers, while criticizing Iran, believe that diplomacy is the best way forward.
The Europeans remain part of a nuclear accord negotiated by former US president Barack Obama, under which Iran drastically reduced its nuclear program in return for unmet promises of sanctions relief.
EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini acknowledged struggles to preserve the pact, from which Iran has stopped strict compliance as it presses for economic benefits.
“I will not hide that it is increasingly difficult to do it,” she told reporters after talks among European powers. “We will try and continue keeping the agreement in place and overcome the difficulties we are facing,” she said. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said that there had at least been progress in moving toward diplomacy. “The fact that all sides are basically willing to hold talks — the Iranian side as well as the American side — is a positive signal,” he said.
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