Trump to Ramp Up Sanctions on Iran After Calling Off Retaliatory Strike

Bowen Xiao
By Bowen Xiao
June 23, 2019Politics
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Trump to Ramp Up Sanctions on Iran After Calling Off Retaliatory Strike
President Donald Trump listens during a working lunch with governors on workforce freedom and mobility in the Cabinet Room of the White House on June 13, 2019. (Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump said he would impose “major additional sanctions” on Iran over the weekend after he stopped a retaliatory missile strike “from going forward at this time,” an indication his administration is taking a more diplomatic approach to increase pressure on the Islamic regime.

The added sanctions—to be imposed on June 24—comes as Trump said he hoped to made a deal with Tehran to bolster its flagging economy, an apparent move to defuse tensions following the downing of an unmanned U.S. drone by Iran.

“I look forward to the day that Sanctions come off Iran, and they become a productive and prosperous nation again—The sooner the better!” he wrote in multiple posts on Twitter.

Trump said the United States was open to talks with Iranian leaders with “no preconditions,” and at the same time cautioned Tehran of “obliteration” if a conflict ensued in an interview that aired on June 23 with NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

“I’m not looking for war and if there is, it’ll be obliteration like you’ve never seen before. But I’m not looking to do that,” Trump told the network. “Look, you can’t have nuclear weapons. And if you want to talk about it, good. Otherwise you can live in a shattered economy for a long time to come,” Trump said.

He added that the proposed talks between the two countries were “not about the oil.”

Currently over 80 percent of the Iranian economy is under sanctions and the upcoming penalties “will be a further effort to ensure that their capacity not only to grow their economy, but to evade sanctions, becomes more and more difficult,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told reporters on June 23.

Tehran is already feeling the effects of existing U.S. sanctions according to National security adviser John Bolton, who warned the Islamic regime on June 23 not to mistake “U.S. prudence and discretion for weakness.”

Tensions between Iran and the United States and its allies, including Saudi Arabia, have risen since Washington pulled out of a deal in 2018 between Iran and global powers that aimed to curb Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

Iran has continued its terror-related activities ever since it was first designated as a state sponsor of terrorism in 1984.

Trump, in the NBC interview, was asked if he felt pushed into the conflict with Iran by any U.S. officials. He said in response that there were two groups of people in his administration—”I have doves and I have hawks.”

The president said he listens to all his advisers before making his own decision.

“John Bolton is absolutely a hawk,” Trump said. “If it was up to him he’d take on the whole world at one time, okay? But that doesn’t matter because I want both sides.”

On June 20, an Iranian missile destroyed a U.S. Global Hawk surveillance drone in international airspace, according to the Pentagon. Trump later said he had called off a retaliatory military strike at the last minute after being told it would kill 150 people, saying on Twitter that it “was not proportionate to shooting down an unmanned drone.”

On top of that, Vice President Mike Pence told CNN on June 23 that the administration remains doubtful that the drone attack was authorized “at the highest levels,” of Iran’s leadership.

Iran said it may further scale back compliance with the nuclear deal unless European countries shield it from U.S. sanctions through a trade mechanism, the head of Tehran’s Strategic Council on Foreign Relations was quoted as saying on June 23.

“If Europeans don’t take measures within the 60-day deadline (announced by Iran in May), we will take new steps,” the semi-official news agency ISNA quoted Kamal Kharazi as saying.

From The Epoch Times

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