The Jerusalem Post

Pompeo to meet PM today for talks on Iran

Trumps says he ‘may’ arrive for embassy opening

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF, MICHAEL WILNER in Washington, and Reuters

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will arrive here on Sunday to talk with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about Iran’s regional aggression and the nuclear deal with Tehran.

The former CIA director, who was sworn in as Rex Tillerson’s replacemen­t on Thursday, left immediatel­y for a Friday meeting at NATO headquarte­rs in Brussels.

He landed Saturday at King Salman Air Base in Riyadh, where he was greeted by Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir and other Saudi officials.

State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert tweeted after Pompeo’s meeting with Jubeir that “Saudi Arabia plays an important leadership role in working toward a peaceful and prosperous future for the region.

“A strong US-Saudi partnershi­p is critical to that effort,” she added.

US offers EU mixed signals on Iran deal,

Pompeo will also talk with King Salman before heading to Jerusalem on Sunday, where he is expected to deliver a public statement with Netanyahu.

Brian Hook, Pompeo’s senior policy adviser, said in Riyadh that Iran’s missile program would be a major topic in talks in Saudi Arabia and Israel.

Hook, who is negotiatin­g

WASHINGTON – European leaders visiting the American capital last week hoped for clarity on the fate of the Iran nuclear deal, now in President Donald Trump’s hands. But they received no such thing.

Trump told France’s President Emmanuel Macron at the White House that they were “close to understand­ing each other” on the 2015 pact, two weeks ahead of a decision by Trump whether to stay with it or withdraw. But Macron predicted Trump would choose the latter in a discussion with reporters the following day, noting he could not say with confidence which way he would go.

Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel, meanwhile, also said at the White House on Friday that the future of the deal was up to the American president. She adopted Macron’s newly sharpened rhetoric, characteri­zing the deal as “insufficie­nt” and “far from perfect” – but she declined to outline precisely what Germany is willing to do to fix it.

Macron is leading a European effort to keep Trump in the deal by proposing a “bigger,” more comprehens­ive agreement: one that would not only address Iran’s short-term nuclear work, but also the size and efficiency of its nuclear infrastruc­ture in the long-term, its ballistic missile work and, ambitiousl­y, its projection of power across the Middle East.

But the proposal is, by Macron’s own admission, a months-long endeavor – and would build on top of the existing nuclear deal, rather than replace it.

At this late hour in negotiatio­ns, it is still unclear whether Trump would be satisfied with add-ons to the existing nuclear deal, or if he needs the immediate gratificat­ion of a withdrawal – of scrapping the Obama-era effort and starting from scratch.

“We are not aiming to renegotiat­e the JCPOA [Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action; the Iran nuclear deal] or reopen it or change its terms,” Christophe­r Ford, the administra­tion’s non-proliferat­ion envoy, told reporters on the sidelines of a conference in Geneva on Wednesday. “We are seeking a supplement­al agreement that would in some fashion layer upon it a series of additional rules – restrictio­ns, terms, parameters, whatever you want to call it – that help answer these challenges more effectivel­y.”

And yet, in Geneva on his first trip as secretary of state, Mike Pompeo suggested the opposite.

“There’s been no decision made. So the team is working, and I’m sure we’ll have lots of conversati­ons to deliver what the president has made clear,” Pompeo said. “Absent a substantia­l fix, absent overcoming the shortcomin­gs – the flaws of the deal – he is unlikely to stay in that deal past this May.

Trump sees several major flaws in the agreement that must be somehow fixed in the next two weeks. He believes its failure to address Iran’s ballistic missile program – including a military vehicle designed to deliver nuclear warheads – is an unacceptab­le concession; that the agreement should address Iran’s general strategic posture in the region, which was the driving force of the nuclear program in the first place; that the expiration of several clauses in the deal will allow Iran to build its nuclear program over time to an industrial scale; and that UN inspectors should be granted snap access to Iran’s military sites.

That final condition requires reopening the agreement – a redline for all other parties to it, which include France, Germany, Britain, Russia, China, the EU and Iran itself.

“I think the West has grown soft, has lost its political will and determinat­ion; the deal with Iranians is something I cannot understand,” Israel’s defense minister Avigdor Liberman said on Friday at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

He met at the White House with Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton, to discuss the fate of the deal. According to the Israeli Embassy, he emerged from their talks confident that the two see eye to eye on the Iranian threat. They have both been deeply critical of the nuclear deal and have called for it to be scrapped, but officials offered no more details of their conversati­on.

But Trump’s defense secretary, James Mattis, who met Liberman later in the day, seemed to question the wisdom of hastily withdrawin­g from the nuclear accord in a Thursday congressio­nal hearing.

Should those parties fail to make it acceptable, Trump is threatenin­g to withdraw the US from the agreement by reimposing nuclear-related sanctions on Iran lifted by the 2015 deal.

Mattis said that criticism of the agreement is “valid,” and that “obviously, aspects of the agreement can be improved upon.” The position appeared in sync with that of Macron, who seeks improvemen­ts instead of revisions.

“I will say it is written almost with an assumption that Iran would try to cheat,” Mattis told the Senate panel. He said he had read the agreement in full several times, including its classified annexes. “The verificati­on – what is in there – is actually pretty robust as far as our intrusive ability to get in.”

 ?? (Reuters) ?? MIKE POMPEO
(Reuters) MIKE POMPEO
 ?? (Reuters) ?? DONALD TRUMP
(Reuters) DONALD TRUMP

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