Could Trump gamble big on Iran? Skepticism reigns

Facebook
Twitter
WhatsApp
Telegram
Email

US President Donald Trump is not afraid of surprises but could he take one of the biggest shifts of all in his foreign policy — easing sanctions on Iran?

Washington is widely skeptical that Trump will shift course on Iran, with his hawkish advisors long pushing a hard line aimed at crippling the clerical regime.

But Trump appeared open on Monday as French President Emmanuel Macron proposed a summit in the coming weeks with his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rouhani.

Responding to a suggestion by Macron, the host of the G7 summit in the coastal resort of Biarritz, Trump said that Iran “may need some money to get them over a very rough patch” in the form of a line of credit.

The idea is part of a French-led effort to keep alive a 2015 deal under which Iran drastically scaled back its nuclear work. The accord was negotiated under former president Barack Obama and trashed by Trump.

Barbara Slavin, director of the Future of Iran Initiative at the Atlantic Council, said Macron was likely trying to buy time and keep Iran in the deal — sending a message as well that Trump could be gone after elections next year.

See also  Deforestation in Amazon surged by 104 percent

Iran has played down the possibility of a summit, with Rouhani saying that the US must first lift all sanctions — which have badly hurt an economy that had soared following the nuclear agreement.

Slavin doubted Trump would end sanctions — or that any gesture would lead to a summit, the most likely venue for which would be on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York next month.

“Rouhani wouldn’t meet Obama, who negotiated the deal. All Obama managed to get is a phone call with Rouhani.

“Trump has punished Iran more than any president in American history, for complying with an international agreement! So why would Rouhani reward Trump with this photo-op?” she said.

Unlike with North Korea, where Kim Jong Un has relished the image of standing next to Trump for leader-to-leader talks, the US has been toxic for Iranian politicians since the 1979 Islamic revolution that toppled the Western-oriented shah.

See also  Mexico, US to exchange information on shooting

Any sanctions relief would face heated resistance from aides led by national security advisor John Bolton, who had advocated attacking Iran and toppling its regime.

“The idea that Iran would receive some tangible economic benefit merely for stopping doing things that it shouldn’t have been doing in the first place is just a non-starter,” Bolton told Radio Free Europe on Tuesday.

The Trump administration, which is closely allied with Iran’s rivals Saudi Arabia and Israel, has demanded far-reaching changes from Iran beyond its nuclear programme including ending support for groups around the region such as Lebanon’s Hezbollah militants and Yemen’s Huthi rebels.

Mark Dubowitz, head of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, which pushes a hard line on Iran, said the idea of a summit could show that sanctions drove the regime to diplomacy.

But he warned against the credit line proposed by Macron, which reportedly could be worth as much as $15 billion to help stabilise Iran’s economy.

See also  Police shoot knifeman in HK subway station

“This is a supremely stupid idea. Those who rightly condemned Obama in 2013-2015 for offering premature sanctions relief to the regime in Iran, instead of increasing the pressure, should be all over this,” he tweeted.

Nikki Haley, Trump’s former ambassador to the United Nations who is popular with pro-Israel advocates, criticised Macron for inviting Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif to the G7 summit.

“Manipulative of Macron to do this and very insincere. #NotWhatFriendsDo,” she tweeted.

But Nicholas Burns, a veteran US diplomat who is now a professor at Harvard, said Macron’s efforts have at least succeeded in shifting the conversation. In June, Trump authorised an attack on Iran in retaliation for its downing of a US spy drone, although he abruptly called off the operation.

“Macron is right to try to assist in opening a channel between Washington and Tehran,” tweeted Burns.

“That could possibly allow the two to shift the issue away from the use of force to diplomacy.” – AFP

Download from Apple Store or Play Store.