Iran in the spotlight as Trump, Rouhani set for UN clash

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UNITED NATIONS, United States, Sept 25, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – A showdown looms
at the United Nations over Iran on Tuesday as President Donald Trump and
Iranian leader Hassan Rouhani are set to square off during the world’s
biggest diplomatic gathering.

On the opening day of the General Assembly debate, Trump and Rouhani are
to take their turn at the podium four months after the US president ditched
the Iran nuclear deal.

The five remaining parties to the agreement — Britain, China, France,
Germany and Russia — announced Monday plans to keep business ties alive with
Iran, staring down Washington’s move to impose sanctions.

Eyeing his second summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Trump
will also tout his diplomacy with Pyongyang as a win, even if the North has
taken little concrete action to dismantle its missile and nuclear programs.

Trump withdrew from the nuclear deal in May, to the dismay of European
allies, Russia and China which had invested years in negotiations to achieve
a milestone agreement on keeping Iran’s nuclear ambitions in check.

In his address, Rouhani will stress that Iran continues to stick to the
2015 deal and portray the United States as a pariah for breaking its
international commitments.

But even though they will be speaking from the same stage, both men have
ruled out a meeting on the sidelines of the assembly.

In a tweet on Tuesday morning, Trump said he had no plans to meet
Rouhani “despite requests” to do so.

“Maybe someday in the future. I am sure he is an absolutely lovely man!”
he said.

Trump used his UN address last year to bash the nuclear deal as “an
embarrassment,” signaling that the United States was ready to walk away from
the agreement.

After its exit, the United States maintains that it is seeking to ramp
up pressure on Iran which it accuses of sowing chaos in Iraq, Syria, Yemen
and Lebanon.

“As I have said repeatedly, regime change in Iran is not the
administration’s policy,” Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton told
reporters.

“We’ve imposed very stringent sanctions on Iran, more are coming, and
what we expect from Iran is massive changes in their behavior,” he said.

After a late meeting on Monday, EU foreign policy chief Federica
Mogherini announced that a new legal entity would be set up to preserve oil
and other business links with Iran.

“This will mean that EU member-states will set up a legal entity to
facilitate legitimate financial transactions with Iran and this will allow
European companies to continue to trade with Iran,” Mogherini told reporters,
flanked by Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.

– No Trump-Rouhani meeting –

Rouhani has also made clear he has no intention of seeing Trump while in
New York during the marathon of meetings.

As a precondition for any dialogue, Rouhani said Trump would need to
repair the damage done by exiting the nuclear deal. “That bridge must be
rebuilt,” he told NBC news.

On Wednesday, Trump will for the first time chair a meeting of the
Security Council on non-proliferation that will give him a fresh opportunity
to make the case for a tougher international stance on Iran.

“The Trump administration’s approach toward Iran seems to boil down to:
squeeze and let’s see what will come,” said Robert Malley, president of
International Crisis Group.

Malley warns that “rising tensions between the US and Iran in the absence
of diplomatic channels is a recipe for an accidental, perilous clash.”

– U-turn on North Korea –

With only six weeks to go before key midterm US elections, Trump will be
seeking to appeal to his hard-right voter base from the dais of the General
Assembly.

Trump used his debut address 12 months ago to threaten to “totally
destroy” North Korea and belittled its leader as “rocket man,” prompting Kim
to respond by calling the US president “mentally deranged.”

But returning to New York, Trump hailed “tremendous progress” to halt
Pyongyang’s nuclear and ballistic missile tests and said that a year later it
was a “much different time.”

“Chairman Kim has been really very open and terrific, frankly, and I
think he wants to see something happen,” Trump said after meeting South
Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Also making his second address at the General Assembly, French President
Emmanuel Macron is expected to take issue with Trump’s America-First policy
and make the case for strengthening the rules-based multilateral order.

Macron is championing the Paris climate agreement on reducing greenhouse
gas emissions that Trump ditched in June, arguing it would harm the US
economy.