Houston Chronicle Sunday

Giuliani: Trump will pull out of Iran deal

President’s newest attorney says he doesn’t have insider informatio­n but knows players

- By Alan Bjerga

Rudy Giuliani suggested that Donald Trump plans to pull the U.S. out of the Iran nuclear agreement, pointing to the presence in the president’s inner circle of new Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and longtime foreign policy hawk John Bolton.

“We have a president who is tough,” Giuliani said Saturday at a conference organized in Washington by the Organizati­on of Iranian-American Communitie­s. “We have a president who is as committed to regime change as we are.”

“What’s going to happen to that agreement?” Giuliani asked the group, one of several Iranian organizati­ons outside the country dedicated to toppling its government. He then pantomimed spitting on a piece of paper meant to represent the 2015 nuclear accord, drawing cheers.

Giuliani was hired in April to be Trump’s lawyer in the matter of the special counsel probe into the 2016 election and possible collusion with Russia by members of Trump’s campaign.

Talking to reporters after the speech, Giuliani said he based his comments on the known positions on Iran of Trump, Bolton and Pompeo, not on any special informatio­n gleaned from within the White House about the administra­tion’s plans.

‘Horrible agreement’

Trump has hinted he may exit the accord by a May 12 deadline, calling it “a horrible agreement for the United States.” Iran is ruling out new talks, calling the current agreement “nonnegotia­ble.” America’s European allies continue to back it, saying the deal has been essential to reining in Iran’s nuclear program.

Still, that deadline may not mean an immediate terminatio­n to negotiatio­ns over the agreement. While Pompeo, sworn in as the top U.S. diplomat in April, hasn’t promised a grace period, he said at his Senate confirmati­on hearing in April that “even after May 12 there is still much diplomatic work to be done.”

Speaking in the Middle East on April 29, Pompeo called Iran “the greatest sponsor of terrorism in the world,” and reiterated his boss’s message: that the U.S. will pull out of the nuclear accord if the “flawed” deal can’t be fixed to its satisfacti­on.

Seeks regime change

Bolton, who was named national security adviser in March, has called the Iran agreement a “strategic debacle.” He said on Fox News in January that the deal should be scrapped, economic sanctions reimposed and regime change encouraged.

For weeks, U.S. negotiator­s have been meeting with allies France, the U.K. and Germany in an effort to reach a consensus on side agreements responding to U.S. concerns. They say they’ve made progress on some elements but haven’t crossed the finish line on the “sunset clauses” in the current deal — under which many of the key provisions expire in coming years and Iran is allowed to start enriching uranium to high levels again.

Under the agreement made in 2015, Iran would redesign, convert and reduce its nuclear facilities while accepting inspection­s in return for an end to all nuclear-related economic sanctions, boosting oil revenue and regaining frozen assets.

The deal was heavily criticized by Republican­s at the time it was finalized as being soft on Iran, while Democrats applauded the relief it provided from a potential nuclear-armed nation hostile to the U.S.

 ?? Andrew Harnik / Associated Press ?? Rudy Giuliani pretends to spit on the Iran nuclear agreement Saturday at a Washington event organized by an IranianAme­rican group dedicated to toppling Iran’s government.
Andrew Harnik / Associated Press Rudy Giuliani pretends to spit on the Iran nuclear agreement Saturday at a Washington event organized by an IranianAme­rican group dedicated to toppling Iran’s government.

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