Gulf News

Macron: We will never let Iran get nuclear arms

Our objective is clear, French president tells US Congress

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French President Emmanuel Macron told the US Congress yesterday that Iran will “never” be allowed to develop atomic weapons, as the fate of a landmark 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran hangs in the balance.

“Our objective is clear,” Macron told lawmakers on the final day of a state visit during which he and President Donald Trump called for a broader “deal” that would also limit Iran’s ballistic missile programme and support for militant groups across the Middle East. “Iran shall never possess any nuclear weapons. Not now. Not in five years. Not in 10 years. Never,” Macron said.

Earlier, Macron pushed Trump to salvage the nuclear deal, which Trump has criticised harshly, and forge a new approach that would also incorporat­e other US and European concerns. Trump signalled a new willingnes­s on Tuesday to consider what Macron called “a new deal with Iran” that would address shortcomin­gs in the pact.

Trump also appeared to threaten a military attack if Iran menaced the US. The two leaders pledged to seek stronger measures to contain Iran but Trump made no commitment­s to stay in the 2015 nuclear deal.

Macron has pushed for a new approach that would see the United States and Europe agree to block any Iranian nuclear activity until 2025 and beyond, address Iran’s ballistic missile programme and generate conditions for a political solution to contain Iran in Yemen, Syria, Iraq and Lebanon.

President Donald Trump signalled new willingnes­s on Tuesday to consider what visiting French President Emmanuel Macron called “a new deal with Iran” that would address shortcomin­gs in the existing nuclear pact, even as he continued to criticise the internatio­nal agreement as “insane”.

Trump also appeared to threaten a military attack if Iran menaced the United States and railed against the hundreds of billions of dollars he said the United States has wasted on Mideast wars with “less than nothing” to show for the effort.

“If Iran threatens us in any way, they will pay a price like few countries have ever paid. OK?” Trump said during a news conference with Macron.

The French president is visiting the United States this week in hopes he can convince Trump not to abandon the nuclear deal ahead of a May 12 deadline when the United States can effectivel­y pull out of the 2015 pact among Iran and six world powers.

Trump has said he would not sign another presidenti­al endorsemen­t of the deal, opening the door to the reimpositi­on of US sanctions unless the agreement could be amended. The White House refers to the ultimatum as “fix it or nix it”.

Macron has spent little time this week publicly defending the pact, instead focusing his efforts on appealing to Trump’s view of himself as an unorthodox dealmaker by suggesting that a supplement­ary agreement carrying his imprimatur could address many of the president’s criticisms of the overall deal.

“I think this is what we’ve been agreeing upon today,” Macron said. “It’s not about tearing apart an agreement and have nothing, but it’s about building something new that will cover all of our concerns.”

Macron is the emissary for a European proposal to add safeguards that address some of Trump’s main complaints about the deal reached under his predecesso­r, Barack Obama. German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrives in Washington tomorrow and is also expected to press Trump on Iran.

The proposed side agree- ments between the United States and Europe could push for internatio­nal inspection of Iranian military sites and apply sanctions if Iran crossed certain thresholds in its missile testing.

Such side deals would not change the terms of the internatio­nal pact itself and would not bind co-signers Russia and China, but they could allow Trump to argue he has improved the deal and provide a reason he could point to for keeping it in place, at least for now.

Deal with four pillars

Macron described “a new deal with four pillars” covering US and European concerns over whether Iran is concealing any current nuclear activities; the prospect that it might return to some activities when provisions of the deal expire in 2025; ballistic missile testing; and Iran’s alleged destabilis­ing activities in the Middle East.

Syria, he said, falls into the last category. Trump praised French help with allied missile strikes in Syria this month. While expressing willingnes­s to entertain keeping the United States in the Iran deal, Trump also made clear he has little use for the agreement

and seemed to relish the focus on what he will decide with the May 12 deadline approachin­g.

“Nobody knows what I’m going to do on the 12th. Although Mr President, you have a pretty good idea,” Trump said to Macron at the news conference.

“But we’ll see, but we’ll see also if I do what some people expect. Whether or not it will be possible to do a new deal with solid foundation­s.”

Macron said the two leaders discussed the Syrian civil war and Iranian influence there during their long morning of meetings that included an extended session where the two leaders met alone. Iran has promised to resume nuclear activities it set aside under the deal if the United States breaks the agreement by reapplying nuclear-related sanctions. But Trump had a warning of his own.

“It won’t be so easy for them to restart. They’re not going to be restarting anything,” Trump said at the beginning of a large meeting with Macron and his delegation. “If they restart it, they’re going to have big problems — bigger than they’ve ever had before. And you can mark it down.”

The deal suspended harsh economic sanctions on Iran related to its nuclear programme in exchange for new curbs on a programme that the United States, Israel and others assessed was close to being able to produce fissile material for a nuclear weapon. Iran denies it sought nuclear weapons and says its programme is entirely peaceful.

Under the accord, which took effect in January 2016, Iran curtailed its production of enriched uranium, sharply reduced its enriched-uranium stockpiles, agreed to strict monitoring of its nuclear facilities by a UN watchdog agency and curbed other activities that raised proliferat­ion concerns. But it continues to produce nuclear fuel at low levels and operate a nuclear power plant.

Macron was to address a joint meeting of Congress yesterday, where he would have the chance to speak to sceptics of the nuclear accord in both parties, particular­ly Republican­s eager for Trump to rip up the deal.

Trump’s expected upcoming meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was also on the agenda.

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