Trump: ‘Great shot’ at bigger deal with Iran
But president adds ‘maybe not’ amid talks with Macron
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump suggested Tuesday that he would consider a plea from visiting French President Emmanuel Macron to renegotiate and expand the multinational Iran nuclear deal rather than follow through on his longstanding pledge to tear it up.
Macron, who came to Washington intent on salvaging the 2015 accord that dismantled Iran’s nuclear program through 2025, proposed “a new deal” to allay Trump’s concerns — by adding planks to contain Iran’s uranium enrichment, its missile programs and its support of militants throughout the region.
“I think we will have a great shot at doing a much bigger — maybe — deal, maybe not deal,” Trump said during a press conference with Macron. “We’re going to find out, but we’ll know fairly soon.”
Macron is on a three-day state visit, the first such formal event for a foreign leader in the Trump presidency, reflecting the affinity between the two leaders. With a May 12 deadline looming for Trump to waive U.S. sanctions against Iran, in keeping with the Iran deal brokered by the Obama administration, Macron’s main mission is preserving the pact. Trump, who has reluctantly waived sanctions in the past, has vowed he would not do so again.
That would likely unravel the deal. Besides the United States, France and Iran, the parties to the accord are Britain, Germany, Russia, China and the European Union. Like France, they maintain support for it. Whether they are open to renegotiation was unclear.
Macron said he and Trump held frank discussions; likewise in public, side by side before reporters, they openly conveyed their differences. The French president acknowledged Trump campaigned against the deal, yet he seemed to appeal to Trump’s desire to hatch something big, outdoing his predecessors, by pressing him to renegotiate.
“This is the only way to bring about stability,” Macron said, adding that “France is not naive when it comes to Iran.”
He made the case that a new deal would not only keep Iran’s nuclear ambitions at bay but also help bring a political settlement to the Syrian civil war — another issue in which Macron is trying to persuade Trump to stay the course. Trump repeated that he is eager to withdraw remaining U.S. troops from Syria, while France wants the United States to keep a force in the war-torn country as a counterbalance to Iran and Russia.
Trump not only stopped short of endorsing a new Iran deal, in public he mostly disparaged the existing pact as “a disaster.”
“It’s insane. It’s ridiculous. It should never have been made. But we will be talking about it,” Trump said as the two leaders sat side-by-side in the Oval Office for their first business meeting early Tuesday.
Against such criticisms of the accord he favored, Macron stood gamely by, seemingly willing to risk political capital to sway Trump. He even endured an awkward gesture by the U.S. president. “We have a very special relationship. In fact, I’ll get that little piece of dandruff off,” Trump said, brushing at Macron’s lapel. “We have to make him perfect — he is perfect.”
During one meeting attended by officials from both countries, Trump separately expressed optimism about his still-unscheduled meeting with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un this spring, calling him “very honorable.”
Questioned at the press conference about his kind words for an autocrat accused of starving his people, among other abuses, Trump said, “I haven’t even discussed a concession, other than the fact that meeting is a great thing.”
Trump has bonded with Macron, but he sounded like a man who might yet disappoint his friend. He complained that the deal to dismantle Iran’s nuclear program gave the country too much money and no restrictions on its separate activities to develop missiles and make trouble internationally. (The money Iran got was its own, assets that had been long frozen until it complied with the 2015 accord.)
“It just seems that no matter where you go, especially in the Middle East, Iran is behind it. Wherever there’s trouble — Yemen, Syria — no matter where you have it, Iran is behind it,” Trump said. “And now, unfortunately, Russia is getting more and more involved.”
Trump spoke vaguely but ominously about how the U.S. would contain Iran if it resumes its nuclear weapons development. “If they restart their nuclear program,” he said, “then they will have bigger problems than they’ve ever had before.”