Trump says he probably would not participate in Putin Iran summit

U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday all but
dismissed Russian President Vladimir Putin’s call for a summit of world leaders
to discuss Iran, saying he probably would not participate.
During a news conference at his Bedminster, New
Jersey, golf club, Trump also said he intended to move next week to trigger a
“snapback” of sanctions on Iran at the United Nations.
“We’ll be doing a snapback,” Trump told reporters
one day after the U.N. Security Council rejected a U.S. bid to extend a U.N.
arms embargo on Iran. “You’ll be watching it next week.”
The United States has threatened to trigger a return
of all U.N. sanctions on Iran using a provision in a 2015 nuclear deal between
Iran and world powers, known as snapback, even though Trump abandoned the
accord in 2018. Diplomats have said the United States would face a tough, messy
battle in any such move.
The United States lost its bid on Friday to extend
the U.N. arms embargo after Putin proposed a summit of world leaders to avoid
“confrontation” over the American “snapback” threat.
“Probably not,” Trump said when asked whether he
would participate in the Putin-backed summit.
In the Security Council vote, Russia and China
opposed extending the weapons ban, which is due to expire in October. Eleven
members abstained, including France, Germany and Britain, while the United
States and the Dominican Republic were the only yes votes.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said on Saturday
the United States suffered a humiliating defeat at the Security Council.
“I don’t remember the United States preparing a
resolution for months to strike a blow at the Islamic Republic of Iran, and it
garners only one vote,” Rouhani said in a televised speech. “But the great
success was that the United States was defeated in this conspiracy with
humiliation.”
“It’s a serious mistake, we regret that,” U.S.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Saturday of the Security Council vote in
a news conference during a visit to Poland.
Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi said the
Security Council’s decision not to extend the arms embargo on Iran will lead to
further Middle East instability.
“The extremist regime in Iran doesn’t just finance
terrorism: it takes an active part in terrorism through its branches around the
world and uses it as a political tool. This behavior represents a danger to
regional and international stability,” Ashkenazi said in a statement on
Saturday.