U.S. President Donald Trump
and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.
United States President
Donald Trump on Tuesday said he would not meet Iranian President Hassan Rouhani
as world leaders gather in New York.
However, he signaled he was
open to a future meeting, despite ongoing tensions over Tehran’s nuclear deal.
Both countries’ presidents
were due to attend the U.N. General Assembly in New York where Trump is
scheduled to address the gathering.
Foes for decades,
Washington and Tehran have been increasingly at odds since May, when the
Republican U.S. president pulled out of the 2015 international nuclear deal
with Iran and announced sanctions against the OPEC member.
The accord, negotiated
under Democratic U.S. President Barack Obama, lifted most international
sanctions against Tehran in exchange for Iran curbing its nuclear program.
Rouhani said on Monday
Tehran would not talk to Trump until the United States returned to the 2015
deal.
The top adviser to
Khamenei, Ali Akbar Velayati, rejected the U.S. offer on Tuesday, saying
“Trump’s and Pompeo’s dream would never come to reality,” the IRNA news agency
said.
“In spite of requests, I
have no plans to meet Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. Maybe someday in the
future. I am sure he is an absolutely lovely man,” Trump wrote in a post on
Twitter.
Alireza Miryousefi,
spokesman for Iran’s U.N. mission, told media that Iran has not requested a
meeting with Trump.
Some Iranian insiders have
said any talks between Rouhani and Trump would effectively kill the existing
deal.
Quashing the current pact
would come at a political cost for the Iranian president, who championed the
deal with the supreme leader’s guarded backing and who could lose support from
European allies.
Rouhani is also under
increasing pressure from his country’s hardliners, including Iran’s elite
Revolutionary Guards, which have kept up the anti-American rhetoric ahead of
the U.N. session.
Iran curbed its nuclear
activities in exchange for sanctions relief in the 2015 nuclear accord.
Trump pulled out, saying
the agreement did not go far enough.
His administration is
pushing allies to cut imports of Iranian oil to zero as Washington prepares to
restore sanctions on Iran’s oil sales in November.
The remaining countries in
the deal, which see it as the best chance to stop Iran from developing a
nuclear bomb, on Monday agreed to keep working to maintain trade with Tehran.
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