The Daily Telegraph

Trump may still meet Rouhani despite strikes in Saudi Arabia

- By Sara Elizabeth Williams in Amman and Nick Allen in Washington

DONALD TRUMP has not ruled out a meeting with Hassan Rouhani, the Iranian president, despite blaming Tehran for devastatin­g drone attacks on Saudi Arabian oil installati­ons.

Iran denied it was behind the attacks on Saturday, which included a strike on the world’s biggest petroleum processing facility. It slashed Saudi Arabia’s oil output in half and threatened to destabilis­e global markets.

Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebel group claimed responsibi­lity, but there were questions over whether it had the capability to carry out the strike alone.

Kellyanne Conway, counsellor to Mr Trump, the US president, said that the developmen­t “did not help” prospects for a meeting between the US and Iranian leaders during the forthcomin­g United Nations general assembly, which opens tomorrow, but she left open the possibilit­y it could happen.

Ms Conway said: “I’ll allow the president to announce a meeting or a non-meeting. The president will at least consider his options.”

She said: “The Iranian regime is responsibl­e for this attack on civilian areas and infrastruc­ture vital to global energy supply, and we’re not going to

‘It is now time for the US to put on the table an attack on Iranian oil refineries if they continue their provocatio­ns’

stand for that … We will continue our maximum pressure campaign in Iran.”

Mr Trump pulled the US out of the 2015 Iranian nuclear deal last year, saying it would not stop Iran from developing a nuclear bomb, and reimposed sanctions. But the president has made clear he is willing to meet Iran’s leadership to renegotiat­e a deal.

Following the Saudi attacks, Lindsey Graham, the Republican US senator and friend of the president, urged more aggressive action.

He said: “It is now time for the US to put on the table an attack on Iranian oil refineries if they continue their provocatio­ns or increase nuclear enrichment.”

A spokesman for Iran’s foreign ministry said: “Such fruitless and blind accusation­s and remarks are incomprehe­nsible and meaningles­s.”

Dominic Raab, the Foreign Secretary, called the strikes an “egregious attack on the security of Saudi Arabia” and a “reckless attempt” to disrupt global oil supplies.

The targeted sites were 500 miles from the Yemeni border.

Two sources told CNN the drones could have been launched from Iraq, an allegation the country’s leadership forcefully denied.

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