Trump Threatens Iran With 'big problems'
US President
Donald Trump has warned Iran of "big problems" if it resumes the
nuclear programme it agreed to curb in a 2015 international accord.
Speaking in
the White House Oval Office as he hosts French President Emmanuel Macron, Mr
Trump called the Iran deal "a disaster" and "insane".
The US
president has been threatening to reject an extension of the Obama-era nuclear
pact by a 12 May deadline.
Mr Macron is
in Washington lobbying Mr Trump to preserve the pact.
Germany's
Chancellor Angela Merkel is due to visit Washington on Friday to make a
last-minute bid to dissuade the president from potentially torpedoing the
agreement
"It
won't be so easy for them to restart," Mr Trump said on Monday when a
journalist asked him about the possibility of Iran relaunching their nuclear
programme if the deal is scrapped.
"They're
not going to be restarting anything. They restart it they're going to have big
problems, bigger than they've ever had before.
"And
you can mark it down - they restart their nuclear programme, they will have
bigger problems than they've ever had before."
He added:
"We're not going to allow certain things to happen that are happening. The
Iran deal is a disaster. They're testing missiles. What's that all about?"
Mr Trump's
stark warning comes a day after Iranian President Hassan Rouhani threatened
"severe consequences" if the US withdraws from the nuclear deal.
Mr Rouhani
did not specify what retaliatory action Tehran might take. But his Foreign
Minister, Javad Zarif, has said a probable response would be to restart the
enrichment of uranium - a key bomb-making ingredient.
Under the
agreement, Tehran agreed to curb its nuclear programme, which it maintains was
for peaceful civilian purposes, in return for an easing of economic sanctions.
Mr Trump has
long complained that the deal - signed by the US, Iran, Europe, Russia and China
- does nothing to halt Iran's support for militant groups in the region such as
Hezbollah.
During the
meeting, Mr Macron spoke in French and then translated into English, saying:
"The Iran deal is an important issue but we have to take a far broader picture
which is security in the overall region."
"What
we want to do is to contain Iran and its presence in the region," he
added.
At one point
during the meeting, Mr Trump wiped away "dandruff" from Mr Macron's
shoulder.
"We do
have a very special relationship," Mr Trump told journalists gathered in
his office.
"In
fact I'll get that little piece of dandruff off.
"Little
piece! We have to make him perfect. He is perfect."
Earlier in
the day, Mr Macron and his wife were welcomed to the White House with a
military ceremony and a 21-gun salute.
In welcoming
remarks, Mr Trump thanked France for joining the US and Britain earlier this
month in launching air strikes after an alleged chemical attack in Syria.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
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