UNITED NATIONS – Iranian President Hassan Rouhani told world leaders Wednesday that there would be no negotiations with the U.S. as long as economic sanctions remained in effect. “We once negotiated under sanctions. We will not do so again. Halt the sanctions and return to your commitments so the dialogue may reopen,” he said at the U.N. General Assembly. The U.S. imposed measures targeting Iran’s key oil industry after withdrawing last year from the 2015 agreement that limited Iran’s nuclear program. Tehran has since surpassed some of the limitations, arguing that the other signatories are not living up to their part of the agreement, particularly ensuring that it gets sanctions relief.
Just ‘beautiful words’
“For one year, Iran remained fully faithful to all of its nuclear commitments in the JCPOA,” Rouhani said referring to the nuclear deal by its initialism. “We provided Europe with the opportunity to fulfill its 11 commitments made to compensate for the U.S. withdrawal. However, unfortunately, we only heard beautiful words, while witnessing no effective measures.”
European efforts to keep Iran in compliance with the deal by easing some of its economic pain through a special trade mechanism have not provided the scope of relief Tehran seeks.
“We will continue to work together with the unity of purpose to try and preserve it, without ignoring the challenges,” European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said of the nuclear deal. “As you know, the agreement has two pillars — the nuclear commitment and the economic side that is linked to the sanctions lifting. On both elements, there is full determination to try and preserve the agreement,” she told reporters at the U.N. after a meeting Wednesday morning with the remaining participants in the nuclear deal.
But she acknowledged that since the U.S. withdrew from the deal last year and Iran began moving away from its commitments, saving the deal was becoming complicated.
“I will not hide that it is increasingly difficult to do it and we have discussed today the fact that we will try and continue keeping the agreement in place and overcome the difficulties we are facing,” she said.
In his speech, Rouhani made clear that Tehran’s “patience has a limit.”
He also alluded to earlier hopes that this week’s U.N. gathering could provide a venue for an encounter between himself and U.S. President Donald Trump.
“Memorial photos are the last station of negotiations, not the first one,” Rouhani said.
Global threat
His address came a day after Trump labeled the Iranian regime as one of the greatest global threats. Trump told the General Assembly that Tehran oppresses its citizens at home while fueling conflicts and terrorism beyond its borders.
He said as long as this continued, U.S. sanctions would be tightened, not lifted. But he left open the door to diplomacy, noting that some of America’s past enemies were now its closest friends.
Earlier this month, U.S. officials accused Iran of being responsible for an attack on Saudi oil facilities, which Iran denied.
Saudi Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Adel al-Jubeir told reporters at the United Nations that his government had launched an investigation to establish the location from which the missiles and drones from the Sept. 14 attack came.
“The initial investigation results indicate proof that these were Iranian weapons, so we hold Iran responsible for this,” Jubeir said.
U.N. missile experts have also gone to Saudi Arabia to support the investigation. Jubeir said once all work was done, Riyadh would decide its next steps in consultations with its allies.
“The key to this is that Iran’s behavior cannot continue like this,” he said. “Iran must abide by international law. Iran must comply with a rules-based international order. Iran’s aggressive behavior must be checked.”
U.N. debate continues
Other leaders also took the podium in the General Assembly hall on Wednesday, many from developing countries, who spoke of the challenges they faced from global warming — a theme of this year’s meeting.
“Climate change has become an existential threat not only to the lives of people in island states, but the world as a whole,” said President Danny Faure of the East African island nation of Seychelles. “We will fight — with a passionate sense of urgency — against inequalities which directly impact us.”
He said it was “unacceptable” that 50% of greenhouse gas emissions are produced by 10 percent of the planet’s wealthiest inhabitants living in the richest nations.
“The impact of climate change requires global collaborative efforts,” said Zambian President Edgar Chagwa Lungu. “As a developing country, Zambia needs assistance to enhance her capacity in key areas, such as scientific research, early warning, rapid response and transfer of appropriate technologies to help cope with the negative impact of climate change.”
Ahead of the annual debate, leaders held a climate action summit on Monday.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that while the world was losing the battle to slow global warming, there was still time to reverse the negative and potentially catastrophic effects if innovative and ambitious action plans were implemented.