US will continue with sanctions on Iran in effort to make Tehran negotiate: Hook

US Navy veteran Michael White (L) holding a folded US flag as he poses with US Special Envoy to Iran Brian Hook at Zurich Airport in Zurich, Switzerland, on June 4, 2020. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 05 June 2020
Follow

US will continue with sanctions on Iran in effort to make Tehran negotiate: Hook

WASHINGTON: The US will continue with its policy of harsh sanctions on Iran in an effort to bring Tehran to the negotiating table, US Special Representative for Iran Brian Hook said on Friday.

Hook added that the door remains open for a wider negotiation with Iran about its nuclear program and other issues but so far talks have been limited to prisoner releases.

“(President Donald Trump) has had the door open to diplomacy for many years and in the same time frame, he has met (North Korean leader) Kim Jong Un three times. So, we would like to see the (Iranian) regime meet our diplomacy with diplomacy,” he told reporters one day after Iran freed US citizen Michael White. 

Hook also said that the number of US citizens released from wrongful imprisonment will continue to grow. 


Trump asks Netanyahu to change West Bank policy

Updated 8 sec ago
Follow

Trump asks Netanyahu to change West Bank policy

  • US President, his team raise settler violence, financial instability of PA, Israeli settlements’ expansion

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump and ​his top advisers asked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to change Israel’s policies in ‌the occupied ‌West ‌Bank during ​their meeting according to a US official and another source, both with direct knowledge, ‌Axios said.
Home ​to 2.7 million Palestinians, the West Bank has long been at the heart of plans for a future Palestinian state alongside Israel. 
According to the US official, the White House thinks a violent escalation in the West Bank would undermine efforts to implement the Gaza peace agreement and prevent the expansion of the Abraham Accords before the end of Trump’s term.
Trump and his team expressed concern about the situation in the West Bank and asked Netanyahu to avoid provocative steps and “calm things down,” the sources said.
The president and his team raised settler violence against Palestinian civilians, the financial instability of the Palestinian Authority, and Israeli settlements expansion, the sources said.
The US message was that changing course in the West Bank is critical to repair Israel’s relations with European countries and, hopefully, expand the Abraham Accords. “Netanyahu spoke very strongly against settler violence and said he is going to take more action,” the source with knowledge said.