The Mercury News

Memo: Iran deal axed to spite Obama

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON >> A U.K. newspaper published more leaked memos from Britain’s ambassador in Washington on Sunday, despite a police warning that doing so might be a crime.

In one 2018 cable published by the Mail on Sunday, U.K. Ambassador Kim Darroch says President Donald Trump pulled out of an internatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran as an act of “diplomatic vandalism” to spite his predecesso­r, Barack Obama.

The memo was written after then-Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson visited Washington in a failed attempt to persuade the U.S. not to abandon the Iran nuclear agreement.

“The outcome illustrate­d the paradox of this White House: you got exceptiona­l access, seeing everyone short of the president; but on the substance, the administra­tion is set upon an act of diplomatic vandalism, seemingly for ideologica­l and personalit­y reasons — it was Obama’s deal,” Darroch wrote.

Darroch announced his resignatio­n last week after the newspaper published cables in which he branded the Trump administra­tion dysfunctio­nal and inept. The White House responded by refusing to deal with him, and Trump called the ambassador a “pompous fool” in a Twitter fusillade.

U.K. police are hunting the culprits behind the leak — and, contentiou­sly, have warned journalist­s that publishing the documents “could also constitute a criminal offence.”

Yet both Johnson and Jeremy Hunt, the two contenders to become Britain’s next prime minister, have defended the media’s right to publish.

“We have to make sure that we defend the right of journalist­s to publish leaks when they are in the national interest,” Hunt said.

British officials have said they have no evidence that hacking was involved in the documents’ release, and that the culprit is likely to be found among politician­s or civil servants in London.

Police are investigat­ing the leak as a potential breach of the Official Secrets Act, which bars public servants from making “damaging” disclosure­s of classified material. Breaking the act carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison, though prosecutio­ns are rare.

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