NEW YORK: Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday proposed a video summit with the US, Britain, France, China, Germany and Iran in a bid to avoid “confrontation and escalation” at the UN, where Washington is trying to extend an arms embargo on Tehran.
“The issue is urgent,” Putin said in a statement, adding that the alternative was “only further escalation of tensions, increasing risk of conflict – such a scenario must be avoided.”
When asked if he would take part, US President Donald Trump told reporters: “I hear there’s something, but I haven’t been told of it yet.”
French President Emmanuel Macron is open to taking part in a video summit, the Elysee Palace said.
The 15-member UN Security Council will announce later today the result of a vote on a US-drafted resolution to extend the weapons ban. Diplomats say it is bound to fail and put the fate of a 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers further at risk.
Sanctions
If the US is unsuccessful it has threatened to trigger a return of all UN sanctions on Iran using a provision in the nuclear deal, known as snapback, even though Washington quit the accord in 2018. Diplomats say the US could try to do this as early as next week.
Putin said Russia, which is an ally of Iran in the Syrian civil war, remained fully committed to the nuclear deal and that the aim of a video summit would be “to outline steps that will allow to avoid confrontation and escalation of the situation in the Security Council.”
He also said leaders could discuss establishing “reliable security and confidence building measures” in the Gulf, adding that this could be “achieved if we combine the political will and constructive approach of all our states and the states in the region.”
Trump wants to negotiate a new deal with Iran that would prevent it from both developing nuclear weapons and curb its activities in the region and elsewhere.
He dubbed the 2015 nuclear deal – reached by the Obama administration – “the worst deal ever.”
The 13-year-old arms embargo is due to expire in October.
Diplomats warn that if the US triggers a sanctions snapback the process would be tough and messy.
They say several countries would argue that Washington legally could not activate a return of sanctions and therefore simply would not reimpose the measures on Iran themselves.