In bumpy U.N. dealings, Trump found backing on North Korea, isolation on
Iran
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[September 18, 2020]
By Michelle Nichols
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Though famously
skeptical of the United Nations, U.S. President Donald Trump harnessed
its collective power to impose crushing sanctions on North Korea in a
bid to start talks with Pyongyang, but faces frustration over a similar
push on Iran.
While the U.N. Security Council was unified on North Korea, there is
almost total opposition to the Trump administration's assertion that it
has triggered a return of all U.N. sanctions on Iran, using a process
agreed under a 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran that Washington quit two
years ago.
Diplomats expect Iran to be a focus when Trump addresses the annual U.N.
meeting of world leaders on Tuesday from the White House just days after
a deadline passes that Washington says requires all countries to extend
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-iran-usa-arms-exclusive/exclusive-trump-plans-executive-order-to-punish-arms-trade-with-iran-sources-idUSKBN268308?il=0
an arms embargo and reimpose other sanctions on Tehran.
It will be the fourth U.N. speech by Trump, who is seeking re-election
on Nov. 3 and espouses an "America first" approach often at odds with
the multilateralism that governs the world body. Diplomats gasped during
his debut when he threatened "fire and fury" on North Korea and laughed
the second year when he boasted about his accomplishments. Last year he
denounced Iran's "bloodlust," but said there was a path to peace.
After years of U.S. rhetoric on Iran at the United Nations, Washington
said it took action at the 15-member Security Council last month that it
said would lead to a return of all U.N. sanctions on Iran this weekend.
But 13 members, including America's long-time allies, said the U.S. move
has no legal effect and diplomats say few countries are likely to
implement the measures, which were lifted under the deal between world
powers and Iran that aimed to stop Tehran developing nuclear weapons.
"There should be joint leverage against Iran on the nuclear and other
files," said a senior European diplomat, speaking on condition of
anonymity. "Damage is done when that unity cracks and one country goes
it alone and the leverage is reduced."
Pompeo said on Wednesday that the United States would do "all the things
we need to do" to enforce the U.N. sanctions.
Trump called the Iran nuclear agreement the "worst deal ever." Since
withdrawing, the Trump administration has imposed unilateral sanctions
under what it says is a "maximum pressure" campaign to force Iran to
negotiate a new deal.
A senior Security Council diplomat, also speaking on condition of
anonymity, argues the Iran nuclear deal had been working until
Washington quit and "Iran is closer to the bomb right now than it was
two years ago," adding that the threat posed by North Korea "now is
bigger than three years ago."
PRESSURE TO TALK
Despite his disregard for the U.N., Trump got off to a good start in his
first year in office: the Security Council unanimously agreed to a
U.S.-led push bolster sanctions on North Korea three times after
Pyongyang tested long range ballistic missiles and carried out a nuclear
test.
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North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump
talk in the garden of the Metropole hotel during the second North
Korea-U.S. summit in Hanoi, Vietnam Feb. 28, 2019. REUTERS/Leah
Millis
In 2018, then U.S. envoy to the U.N. Nikki Haley recalled that she
told Trump: "We would not be in the situation we are with North
Korea without the U.N. because that was the only way to get the
international community on the same page."
The pressure allowed Trump to open a diplomatic door to North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un aimed at Pyongyang's denuclearization. But
despite three meetings, no progress has been made and Security
Council unity appears shaky as China and Russia are suggesting it
consider lifting some sanctions on Pyongyang to encourage further
talks.
Trump, however, says his diplomacy is working as Kim has not carried
out any nuclear or long-range missile tests since 2017.
Trump has turned his back on decades of U.S. leadership at the U.N.,
by pulling out of the U.N. Human Rights Council, the World Health
Organization, the U.N. cultural agency UNESCO, a global accord to
tackle climate change and opposed a U.N. migration pact. Washington
has cut funding for the U.N. Population Fund and the U.N. agency
that helps Palestinian refugees.
Nevertheless, Trump has admitted that he sees potential in the U.N.
and has used the U.S. position at the organization's biggest funder
to push Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to carry out reforms.
Trump, it turns out, also pushed for U.N. involvement when his
diplomats would not.
When North Korea invited then U.N. political affairs chief Jeffrey
Feltman to visit Pyongyang in 2017 amid Trump's blunt rhetoric and
sanctions campaign, Trump overruled opposition from his own
officials to say Feltman should go, Feltman told Reuters last week.
Six months later, Trump had his first meeting with Kim in Singapore.
"I wouldn't say it paved the way (for the Singapore summit), I think
everything contributes," Guterres told Reuters on Monday of the
visit by Feltman in 2017. "But what matters here is that the key
protagonists engage with each other."
(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; editing by Mary Milliken and Grant
McCool)
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