Bolton: Sanctions, other pressure will bring Iran to bargaining table
President Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton, said Tuesday that new U.S. sanctions and other pressure is likely to bring Iran to the negotiating table.
“They’ll either get the point or … we will simply enhance the maximum pressure campaign further,” he told reporters in Jerusalem after meeting with Russian and Israeli officials, according to Reuters. “It will be, I think, the combination of sanctions and other pressure that does bring Iran to the table.”
U.S. disarmament ambassador Robert Wood also said Tuesday that the U.S. does not plan to initiate a conflict against Iran, the news service reported.
{mosads}“We will not initiate a conflict against Iran, nor do we intend to deny Iran the right to defend its airspace but if Iran continues to attack us, our response will be decisive,” he said at the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva.
An Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman, however, tweeted Tuesday that the sanctions imposed by Trump through an executive order on Monday are “the permanent closure of the path of diplomacy.”
“Imposing useless sanctions on Iran’s Supreme Leader and the commander of Iran’s diplomacy is the permanent closure of the path of diplomacy,” tweeted Abbas Mousavi.
Trump on Monday signed an executive order imposing sanctions on Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other officials. His administration is expected to sanction Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif later this week.
Tensions between Tehran and Washington have mounted in recent weeks.
Last week, Iran shot down a U.S. drone. Trump responded by saying on Twitter that the U.S. had prepared a military strike against the country, but that he called it off when he learned how many people could die. He later added that he ordered the strike not to go forward “at this time.”
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