Allies and adversaries worry as Trump sets stage for reveal on Iran deal
WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump on Tuesday could make good on his longstanding threat to tear up the Iran nuclear accord – or he could heap fresh disdain on the landmark disarmament pact while charting a course that would keep key elements in place, at least for now.
On Monday, five days ahead of a closely watched, self-imposed deadline, the president teased his planned announcement with a tweet, telling the world to stay tuned for word at 5 p.m. today, catching even most of his senior national security staff by surprise.
The decision, potentially one of the most consequential of Trump’s presidency, will have repercussions in nearly every corner of the globe. It could ratchet up tensions in the volatile Middle East, strain U.S. alliances with Europe and complicate dealings with Russia and China.
On the campaign trail, and in campaign-style rallies since taking office, Trump has again and again roared out his opposition to what he has U.S. President Donald Trump speaks as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu looks on March 5 in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C.
called the worst deal ever – one that is, not coincidentally, considered one of his predecessor’s signature achievements.
His new national security adviser, John Bolton, is a staunch opponent of the Obama-era accord between Iran and six world powers, heightening speculation that Trump would deliver a coup de grace by immediately reimposing U.S. sanctions that were lifted as part of the 2015 accord. He has held up doing so in past opportunities, saying he was giving European allies a chance to toughen up the deal.
Those allies have pleaded with Trump to preserve the accord, or at
least give them more time to fix it. They note that the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations nuclear watchdog agency empowered to inspect Iranian facilities, has repeatedly found Tehran in compliance with the terms of the deal.
French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel coordinated backto-back White House visits last month in which they urged Trump to stay in the deal. Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May spoke with Trump by phone over the weekend and followed up by dispatching her foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, for a last-minute visit.
In an appearance Monday on “Fox & Friends,” Trump’s favorite cable show, Johnson cast Trump in a flattering statesmanlike light, saying he was correct to criticize the Iran pact.
“The president is right to see flaws in (the accord), and he set a very reasonable challenge to the world,” Johnson said. “He said, ‘Look, Iran is behaving badly, has a tendency to develop intercontinental ballistic missiles. We’ve got to stop that. We’ve got to push back on what Iran is doing in the region. We’ve got to be tougher.’”
Germany, France and Britain have all suggested they have no intention of leaving the deal. But it’s not clear how major European companies and other multinational corporations, including in banking and energy, could avoid running afoul of U.S. sanctions if Trump restores them.
Iran, for its part, telegraphed fresh defiance – but stopped far short of saying it would abandon the deal, or resume its now-blocked nuclear program, if Trump pulls out.