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Pompeo Says U.S. Ready to Talk to Iran Without Preconditions

The joint exercise between a B-52 bomber and an aircraft carrier was reported by the Associated Press.

Pompeo Says U.S. Ready to Talk to Iran Without Preconditions
Mike Pompeo, U.S. secretary of state, speaks during a news conference at the State Department in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Alex Wroblewski/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the Trump administration would be ready to negotiate with Iran without preconditions, even as an American fighter bomber and aircraft carrier practiced strike operations in the Arabian Sea.

Pompeo was responding to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s expression of willingness to negotiate with the U.S. as long as his country wasn’t bullied into doing so. But an Iranian military official warned on Sunday that all U.S. military forces in the Gulf were within range of his country’s missiles, and Iran’s foreign minister said talks are “not very likely.”

A spokesman for Iran’s Foreign Ministry said Pompeo’s comments didn’t demonstrate a change in U.S. policy, according to the semi-official Mehr News agency. The U.S. approach towards the Islamic Republic was wrong and “needs to be corrected.”

“Wordplay and expressing hidden goals through new words are not a criterion of action for Iran, but a major change in approach and action from the United States towards the Iranian people is,” Seyed Abbas Mousavi, spokesman for foreign ministry, told Mehr.

Pompeo spoke after meeting with officials in Switzerland, which has represented American interests in Iran since the countries severed ties four decades ago.

“We’re prepared to engage in a conversation with no preconditions,” he said. “But the American effort to fundamentally reverse the malign activity of the Islamic Republic, this revolutionary force, is going to continue.”

Tightened Sanctions

Frictions spiked in the Gulf after the U.S. announced in April that it would tighten sanctions on Iran’s oil exports, prompting an Iranian threat to scale back commitments under the 2015 multipower nuclear deal Washington quit a year ago. The U.S. has also been beefing up its military presence in the Gulf in response to unspecified threats of attacks from Iran. The joint exercise between a B-52 bomber and an aircraft carrier was reported by the Associated Press.

Negotiations with the U.S. aren’t likely because they’re an extension of President Donald Trump’s pressure campaign, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on ABC TV’s “This Week.”

“Threats against Iran never work,” Zarif said. “Never threaten an Iranian, try respect, that may work.”

What’s more, he said, the U.S. can’t be relied on to keep its word. “People think twice before they talk to the United States because they know that what they agree to today may not hold tomorrow,” Zarif said.

In recent days, the two sides have been sparring over U.S. allegations that Iran had a hand in the sabotage of Saudi oil tankers in mid-May. Iran denies involvement, and has refused to capitulate to the Trump administration’s scaled-up sanctions and displays of military force.

“The Americans know very well that their military forces are within the range of Iran’s missiles,” said Yahya Safavi, a senior military aide to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, in comments carried by state-run Fars news agency on Sunday. “The range of our missiles is more than 300 kilometers (about 200 miles), reaching the shores of countries” across the Gulf, he said, referring to Washington’s oil-rich Gulf Arab allies.

Iran’s fighting words come on the heels of meetings of Gulf, Arab and Islamic leaders in Mecca, where Saudi Arabia’s King Salman accused Iran of threatening global oil supplies and shipping. Four oil tankers and commercial ships were reported sabotaged last month, followed by a drone strike on a Saudi oil pipeline by Iran-backed Yemeni rebels.

“The first gunshot in the Persian Gulf will send oil prices to $100,” Safavi said. “The $100 per barrel oil will not be tolerable for the U.S., Europe and America’s friends such as Japan and South Korea."

Brent crude closed at $64.49 a barrel on Friday.

Amid the heated rhetoric, the U.S. has delayed sanctions on Iran’s petrochemical industry, suggesting the Trump administration may be seeking to dial back tensions, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is expected to meet with Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei this month after Trump accepted his offer for mediation with Iran, the Mainichi newspaper reported, citing an unidentified government source. Abe plans to travel to Iran from June 12 to 14, the first visit by an incumbent Japanese prime minister to the Islamic Republic since 1978.

--With assistance from Abbas Al Lawati, Golnar Motevalli, Mark Niquette and Salma El Wardany.

To contact the reporters on this story: Arsalan Shahla in Dubai at ashahla@bloomberg.net;Zainab Fattah in Dubai at zfattah@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Shaji Mathew at shajimathew@bloomberg.net, Crystal Chui, Steve Geimann

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.