Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

At U.N., Russia leads call for Iran talks

U.S. is lone dissenter in council against joint proposal for Persian Gulf security

- EDITH M. LEDERER

UNITED NATIONS — Russia’s foreign minister called for collective efforts Tuesday to prevent a largescale war in the Persian Gulf and got strong support from all Security Council members except the United States, which called Iran the major culprit and urged that it be held accountabl­e for supporting terrorists and destabiliz­ing the region.

Sergey Lavrov told a high-level virtual council meeting that a worst-case scenario was avoided earlier this year after the U.S. killing of Iran’s top general, Qassem S o l e i ma n i , and warned that “the situation remains fragile and could become dangerous and unpredicta­ble again.”

But Russia, which holds the council presidency this month, believes that “if we work together openly and impartiall­y, and if we pool our political will and our creative potential, we will be able to help the states of the Persian Gulf overcome this difficult historic period and create an effective system of collective security,” he said.

Robert Malley, president of the Brussels-based Internatio­nal Crisis Group, warned that “the regionwide conflict that now looms largest across the globe is a conflict nobody apparently wants — a conflict triggered by tensions in the Gulf region.”

“It is far from inevitable,” he said, but “a single attack by rocket, drone or limpet mine could set off a military escalation between the U.S. and Iran and their respective regional allies and proxies that could prove impossible to contain.”

“An inclusive, collective regional security dialogue aimed at lessening tensions may have only a small chance of materializ­ing, and an even smaller chance of success, but under current circumstan­ces it would be irresponsi­ble not to give it a try,” Malley said.

U.S. allies Britain, France and Germany all supported confidence-building measures in the Gulf and stressed their support for the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran that President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. out of in 2018 — but they also sharply criticized Iran for destabiliz­ing activities.

Two days after the lifting of the U.N. arms embargo on Iran over U.S. objections, French Ambassador Nicolas De Riviere urged possible weapons suppliers and recipients “to exercise the utmost restraint and responsibi­lity in considerin­g the consequenc­es that possible transfers could have for regional security and stability, and to draw the necessary conclusion­s.”

Britain’s acting ambassador, Jonathan Allen, said Iran has continued to transfer arms to regional groups and told the council the U.K. would work “to find a suitable solution to Iranian proliferat­ion.”

German Ambassador Christoph Heusgen criticized human-rights violations in Iran, where, he said, “civilian and political rights are violated every day,” prisons “are the most abhorrent in the whole region,” and “religious minorities like the Baha’i are persecuted.”

U.S. Ambassador Kelly Craft, meanwhile, dismissed any idea of collective security for the Persian Gulf, touting instead the Trump administra­tion’s new approach to the Middle East, including its key role in promoting diplomatic relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.

Responding to Russia’s promotion of security for the Persian Gulf, Craft said: “Respectful­ly, I think the solution is much easier: This council must simply muster the courage to hold Iran accountabl­e to its existing internatio­nal obligation­s.”

“The United States recognizes that Iran is the single greatest threat to peace and security in the Middle East,” she said.

She pointed to Iran’s developmen­t of ballistic missiles and support for proxies in Yemen, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq, saying that “the United States will continue to hold Iran accountabl­e, even if it means we must act alone.”

“What makes America special is that we are unafraid to stand up for what is right,” Craft said. “And I don’t need a cheering section to validate my moral compass.”

“An inclusive, collective regional security dialogue aimed at lessening tensions may have only a small chance of materializ­ing, and an even smaller chance of success, but under current circumstan­ces it would be irresponsi­ble not to give it a try.”

— Robert Malley, president of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group

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