Global Times

Failed conference ‘a lesson’ for the US

▶ Allies lukewarm to Warsaw meeting to pressure Iran

- By Yang Sheng

A US-hosted conference in Warsaw to pressure Iran received a lukewarm response from US allies, with Chinese analysts saying this could be a lesson for the Trump administra­tion to rethink its unwise hostile policy toward Iran.

Arriving in Poland to host an internatio­nal conference on Middle East peace and security, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Tuesday that more than 30 foreign ministers would attend, the Washington Post reported on Wednesday.

However, many countries have said they will not be sending their top diplomats to the meeting – possibly nearly half. What was originally meant as a major US-backed conference to unify its European allies and pressure Iran is now likely to be defined by low interest among US allies.

For instance, Scratch Federica Mogherini, the foreign policy chief of the European Union, said she had a prior commitment. France and Germany are sending second-tier level diplomats. Russia won’t be there at all. And the British foreign secretary may leave early, the Washington Post reported.

Hua Liming, a Middle East studies expert and a former Chinese ambassador to Iran, told the Global Times on Wednesday that “in the past, Iran was isolated before it reached a nuclear deal with the Obama administra­tion in 2015, but now, the Trump administra­tion is isolating itself on the Iranian nuclear issue.”

Although the US and Iran have been hostile toward each other since 1979, the policy implemente­d by the Trump administra­tion is the most clumsy compared to its predecesso­rs, Hua said. “It has been proven that the US can unify neither the UN Security Council nor its European allies. Only a few Arabic countries led by Saudi Arabia and Israel will support the US.”

In September 2018, the EU even created a legal entity to facilitate legitimate financial transactio­ns with Iran in light of the US withdrawal from the internatio­nal agreement on Tehran’s nuclear program and the re-imposition of unilateral sanctions, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

The legal entity will allow European companies to continue to trade with Iran in accordance with EU laws and could be open to other partners in the world. China and Russia all vowed to support it.

Because the euro is the second largest currency for internatio­nal payments, the EU is most qualified to propose a special payment system to counter US sanctions, said Cui Hongjian, director of the Department of European Studies at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies.

The Warsaw conference could be a lesson to the US because it seems like the US has failed to generate support from its European allies, Hua said. “If it refuses to make changes, its stubborn policy will fair to achieve its expectatio­ns. Without support from the EU, China and Russia, no sanctions will work against Iran.”

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