Trump
caught off guard as
Iran's Zarif visits G7 summit
town
25
August, 2019
BIARRITZ,
France (Reuters) - Iran’s foreign minister paid a visit to a G7
summit in France on Sunday, an unexpected twist to a meeting already
troubled by differences between U.S. President Donald Trump and
Western allies over a raft of issues, including Iran.
A
White House official said France’s invitation to Mohammad Javad
Zarif for talks on the sidelines of the gathering in the southwestern
beachside town of Biarritz was “a surprise”.
Zarif
met his French counterpart to assess what conditions could lead to a
de-escalation of tensions between Tehran and Washington, a French
official said.
Zarif
also saw French President Emmanuel Macron during his brief stay, but
the White House official said the Iranian minister did not meet any
U.S. officials before he flew out of Biarritz airport.
European
leaders have struggled to calm a deepening confrontation between Iran
and the United States since Trump pulled his country out of Iran’s
internationally brokered 2015 nuclear deal last year and reimposed
sanctions on the Iranian economy.
Earlier
on Sunday, Trump appeared to brush aside French efforts to mediate
with Iran, saying that while he was happy for Paris to reach out to
Tehran he would carry on with his own initiatives.
Macron
has taken the lead in trying to defuse tensions, fearing that a
collapse of the nuclear deal could set the Middle East ablaze. He met
Zarif on Friday ahead of the G7 summit to discuss ways of easing the
crisis, including reducing some U.S. sanctions or providing Iran with
a compensation mechanism.
Iran
wants to export a minimum of 700,000 barrels per day of its oil and
ideally up to 1.5 million bpd if the West wants to negotiate with
Tehran to save the 2015 deal, two Iranian officials and one diplomat
told Reuters on Sunday.
However,
Trump’s fellow G7 leaders failed on Saturday to persuade the U.S.
president to reissue oil sanction waivers that were granted last year
to some buyers, but which came to end in May, a European diplomat
familiar with the discussion said.
‘DIFFICULT’
DINNER
Trump,
a turbulent presence at last year’s G7 gathering, insisted on
Sunday that he was getting along well with other leaders of a group
that also includes Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan.
But
rifts emerged on issues from his intensifying trade war with China to
the nuclear ambitions of both Iran and North Korea, and the question
of whether Russian President Vladimir Putin should be readmitted to
the group.
Russia
was excluded from what used to be the G8 in 2014 after it annexed
Ukraine’s Crimea and then backed an anti-Kiev rebellion in the
industrial region of Donbas in eastern Ukraine.
A
European official who declined to be named said Russia was the
thorniest issue discussed over dinner on Saturday.
“(The
conversation) became a bit tense over this idea of the G7 being a
club of liberal democracies ... that point was clearly not shared by
the U.S. president,” the official said.
Trump’s
argument was that on a number of issues, like Iran and Syria, it made
more sense to have Putin involved in the talks given that Russia is a
key player there.
New
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Sunday congratulated Macron
for hosting a difficult encounter.
“You’re
doing well,” Johnson said on the sidelines of the summit. “You
did very well last night, my God, that was a difficult one, you did
really, you did really well.”
The
G7 gathering is taking place against a backdrop of worries that a
global economic downturn could be exacerbated by the escalating
tariff war between Washington and Beijing.
Britain’s
Johnson voiced concern on Saturday about creeping protectionism and
said those who support tariffs “are at risk of incurring the blame
for the downturn in the global economy”. Sitting across from Trump
on Sunday, he said: “We’re in favor of trade peace on the whole,
and dialing it down if we can.”
Italian
Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte warned other leaders of the dangers of
protectionism and urged Washington not to carry through on its threat
to impose tariffs on German autos.
However,
the White House doubled down on its aggressive stance toward trade
with China.
White
House spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham, explaining what Trump meant when
he said earlier on Sunday that he had had second thoughts after
announcing more tariff raises on Chinese goods last week, said that
he simply regretted not hiking them higher.
Looking
to broaden the gathering, Macron invited several African leaders to
discuss problems facing their continent, while leaders from India,
Australia, Chile and Spain joined the group for dinner on Sunday
where the focus was on the environment and other issues.
However,
senior U.S. officials accused Macron of looking “to fracture the
G7” by focusing on “niche issues” rather than major global
concerns.
France
denied this, pointing to Sunday’s initial session covering the
economy, trade and security - areas that used to draw easy consensus
but are now sources of great friction.
Trump
up-ended last year’s G7 meeting in Canada, walking out early and
disassociating himself from the final communique.
Amid
the wrangling this time around, some potential positives emerged,
with Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe agreeing in
principle to core elements of a trade deal.
“It’s
billions and billions of dollars. Tremendous for the farmers,”
Trump said.
However,
the two men appeared at odds over North Korea’s series of
short-range missile launches.
Trump,
who prizes his relationship with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un,
said the launches did not violate an agreement and were in line with
what others were doing. Abe, sitting across from him, said they
breached U.N. resolutions.
At
the start of the day, Trump said Britain would have a major trade
deal with Washington after it leaves the European Union. Asked what
his advice on Brexit was for Johnson, he replied: “He needs no
advice, he is the right man for the job”.
While
the transatlantic rift is the most stark, there are also deep
divisions within the European camp, with Johnson making his G7 debut
at a time when he is struggling to persuade EU capitals to
renegotiate Britain’s exit from the bloc, which Johnson has said
will happen on Oct. 31 come what may.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.