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Monday, May 14, 2018
Friday, May 11, 2018
Trump pulls out of Iran deal
WASHINGTON
— President Trump declared on Tuesday that he was withdrawing from the
Iran nuclear deal, unraveling the signature foreign policy achievement
of his predecessor Barack Obama, isolating the United States from its
Western allies and sowing uncertainty before a risky nuclear negotiation
with North Korea.
The decision, while long anticipated and widely telegraphed, leaves the 2015 agreement
reached by seven countries after more than two years of grueling
negotiations in tatters. The United States will now reimpose the
stringent sanctions it imposed on Iran before the deal and is
considering new penalties.
Iran said
it will remain in the deal, which tightly restricted its nuclear
ambitions for a decade or more in return for ending the sanctions that
had crippled its economy.
So did
France, Germany and Britain, raising the prospect of a trans-Atlantic
clash as European companies face the return of American sanctions for
doing business with Iran. China and Russia, also signatories to the
deal, are likely to join Iran in accusing the United States of violating
the accord.
Mr.
Trump’s move could embolden hard-line forces in Iran, raising the
threat of Iranian retaliation against Israel or the United States,
fueling an arms race in the Middle East and fanning sectarian conflicts
from Syria to Yemen.
The president,
however, framed his decision as the fulfillment of a bedrock campaign
promise and as the act of a dealmaker dissolving a fatally flawed
agreement. He predicted his tough line with Iran would strengthen his
hand as he prepared to meet North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, to begin
negotiating the surrender of his nuclear arsenal.
“This
was a horrible one-sided deal that should have never, ever been made,” a
grim-faced Mr. Trump said in an 11-minute address from the Diplomatic
Reception Room of the White House. “It didn’t bring calm, it didn’t
bring peace, and it never will.”
Mr.
Trump’s announcement drew a chorus of opposition from European leaders,
several of whom lobbied him feverishly not to pull out of the agreement
and searched for fixes to it that would satisfy him.
It
also drew a rare public rebuke by Mr. Obama, who said Mr. Trump’s
withdrawal would leave the world less safe, confronting it with “a
losing choice between a nuclear-armed Iran or another war in the Middle
East.”
The
response from Iran itself, however, was muted. President Hassan Rouhani
declared that the Iranians intended to abide by the terms of the deal,
and he criticized Mr. Trump for his history of not honoring
international treaties. Mr. Trump won strong backing from Saudi Arabia
and Israel, whose leader, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, hailed him
for a “historic move” and “courageous leadership.”
Three
times previously, the president’s aides had persuaded him not to
dismantle the Iran deal. But Mr. Trump made clear that his patience had
worn thin, and with a new, more hawkish cohort of advisers — led by
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the national security adviser, John
R. Bolton — the president faced less internal resistance than earlier in
his administration.
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