Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kerry reassures Arabs

Nuclear deal won’t be part of ‘grand bargain,’ Kerry says

- MATTHEW LEE

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, at a news conference Thursday in Riyadh with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal, said a nuclear deal with Iran would not be part of a “grand bargain,” as he sought to ease Arab concerns about Iran’s growing regional influence.

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry sought Thursday to ease Persian Gulf Arab concerns about an emerging nuclear deal with Iran and vowed that any agreement reached would not reduce America’s commitment to combating Tehran’s destabiliz­ing actions in the Middle East and beyond.

Speaking at a news conference in Riyadh with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal, Kerry said a nuclear agreement would not be part of a “grand bargain” with Iran and that the United States would continue to fully support its partners in the Persian Gulf against Iranian interferen­ce.

“We are not seeking a grand bargain,” Kerry said after meeting with the new Saudi monarch, King Salman, and the foreign ministers of the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council — Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, all of which are Sunni-led states unnerved by Shiite Iran’s suspected pursuit of nuclear weapons and its increasing assertiven­ess throughout the region.

“Nothing will be different the day after this agreement, if we were to reach one, with respect to all the other issues in this region,” Kerry said.

“Even as we engage in these discussion­s with Iran around its nuclear program,” the secretary said, “we will not take our eyes off Iran’s other destabiliz­ing actions.”

On efforts to forge a framework agreement with Iran on its nuclear program by the end of March, Kerry said, “We have made progress, but there do remain serious gaps that need to be resolved.

“It may be that Iran cannot say yes to the type of deal that provides the assurances that the internatio­nal community requires.”

He alluded to the next round of talks beginning March 15, and said “we expect soon thereafter to know whether Iran will in fact be able to make the tough decision.”

Saud said he appreciate­d Kerry’s pledge that a nuclear deal “would not come at the expense of forgetting everything else that Iran does.”

Kerry had underscore­d the extent of Arab unease with Iran, which is actively supporting fighters in Syria and Iraq and is backing Shiite rebels in Yemen, which toppled the country’s government last month, apart from its nuclear ambitions.

Asked about Iran’s involvemen­t in fighting in Tikrit, Saud said, “What is happening in Tikrit is exactly what we are worried about. Iran is taking over the country.” Kerry, however, said the Tikrit operation has been Iraqi-led and developed, although he did acknowledg­e there were Iranian elements involved.

Saud accused Iran of major malfeasanc­e in the Arab world, saying that “it promotes terrorism, it occupies lands. These are not the features of a country that seeks to improve its relations with its neighbors.”

Kerry arrived in Riyadh a day after wrapping up the latest round of Iran nuclear negotiatio­ns in Switzerlan­d. He said the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council countries would be invited to Washington in the coming months to discuss improving their security by bolstering their defense partnershi­p with the United States.

On Yemen, Kerry said the U.S. supports the peace process led by the United Nations. Yemen is embroiled in a political crisis that threatens to split the country. The U.N.-mediated talks are aimed at breaking the political stalemate between the rebels known as the Houthis and Yemeni President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi.

Hadi fled the capital of Sanaa after being released from house arrest last month and is now based in the southern city of Aden, from where he has been meeting foreign diplomats, including the U.S. ambassador. Hadi has called for the relocation of embassies to Aden, as several Gulf Cooperatio­n Council members have done already.

The United States, which closed its embassy in Sanaa last month and evacuated its diplomatic staff, has no plans to relocate to Aden, although the U.S. ambassador to Yemen, Matthew Tueller, met Monday with Hadi in Aden. Until the crisis is resolved and the embassy reopened, Tueller and part of his staff will be based in an office at the U.S. Consulate in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, the officials said.

On Syria, Kerry said there has to be a combinatio­n of “diplomacy and pressure” to get the political process moving, and he reiterated the U.S. position that President Bashar Assad must go. At another point, he said “military pressure in particular may be necessary,” and referred to the possibilit­y of dispatchin­g assistance to moderately inclined rebels there.

“He has lost any semblance of legitimacy,” Kerry said.

U.S. officials had said in advance of Kerry’s talks in Riyadh that the United States does not see a military solution to the conflict in Syria but also does not think a political solution is possible while Assad remains in power.

“We must strengthen the capacity for a political solution,” Kerry said.

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AP/EVAN VUCCI
 ?? AP/EVAN VUCCI ?? U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry joins Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal in Riyadh on Thursday.
AP/EVAN VUCCI U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry joins Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal in Riyadh on Thursday.

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