29 Mar 2024
Monday 23 October 2017 - 10:19
Story Code : 280419

Boris Johnson to urge Donald Trump to keep Iran nuclear deal

Independent - Boris Johnsonwill urge Donald Trump to row back on threats to quit the Iran nuclear deal which he will cite as a diplomatic blueprint for solving tensions withNorth Korea.

The Foreign Secretary will point to the success of the Iran deal while calling for "toughness but engagement" with Pyongyang following increasingly warlike rhetoric between theUS President and Kim Jong-un.

In a speech in London, Mr Johnson will say the President was right to keep military action on the table in the face North Korea's increasing nuclear capabilities but he will also praise US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson for opening the door to talks.

It comesafter Mr Trump described the North Korean leaderasRocket Man on a suicide missionand threatened to totally destroy the pariah state in his first speech to the United Nations General Assembly.

Mr Trump also drew international concern when hedecertified the 2015 pact with Iran and last week repeated threats to pull out of the landmark deal.

The Foreign Secretary will urge Mr Trump to invoke the spirit of the 1970 nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT), which avoided a "Gadarene Rush to destruction" by turning the world into a "great arena of Mexican stand-offs".

Speaking at theChatham House annualconference, he will praise the "extraordinary" achievement of the treaty which has contributed tothe "unprecedented epoch of peace and prosperity that we have all been living through".

Mr Johnson will add: "It has helped avoid what might otherwise have been a Gadarene Rush to destruction, in which the world was turned into a great arena of Mexican stand-offs, a nuclear version of the final scene of Reservoir Dogs.

"That far-sightedness is now needed more than ever, not only to keep the NPT, but also one of its most valuable complementary accords, the nuclear deal with Iran."

Mr Johnson will praise Mr Tillerson for reinforcing South Korea's promises not to seek regime change in the North or seek to deploy forces over the border or reunify the pensinsula, saying they opened up a path to talks and de-escalation.

But stressing the need to keep military options on the table, he will say: "That is the model - of toughness but engagement, each reinforcing the other - that we should have at the front of our mind as we try to resolve the tensions in the Korean peninsula."

He will urge the North Korean regime to change course and show that it is once again capable of the "diplomatic imagination" that produced the nuclear non-proliferation treaty and the Iran deal.
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