By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, July
18 -- As the
deadline for
the Iran
nuclear talks
loomed, on
July 18 the
Joint Plan of
Action was
extended until
November 24.
Three Senior
US
Administration
Officials (SAOs)
held a press
call on
background.
The first SAO
spoke against
moves in
Congress to
legislate on
new or future
sanctions,
saying that
could
undermine P5+1
unity.
The second SAO
said that
while the US
is concerned
about Iran's
activities in
Syria, in Gaza
and in Iraq,
only
long-range
missiles that
could carry
nuclear
weapons would
be addressed
in the talks.
The third SAO
bragged that
$2.8 billion
in the next
four months
will not begin
to fix Iran's
economy, and
that the US
will emphasize
that Iran is
not open for
business, its
central bank
is under
sanctions.
But didn't BNP
Paribas still
do business in
Iran? On a
related note,
France's
outgoing
ambassador to
the UN Gerard
Araud on July
18 said the
the Mistral
ships being
sold "are not
destroyers but
transportation
and command
ships." (A
reply: they
are amphibious
assault
vessels.) With
this attitude,
what's next?
Back
on June 16 with
the P5+1 talks
starting in
Vienna, the
question arose
how ISIL's
advance in
Iraq might
impact them.
On June 16 a
Senior State
Department
Official told
the press, "We
are open to
engaging the
Iranians, just
as we are
engaging other
regional
players on the
threat post by
ISIL in Iraq.
The issue did
come up
briefly with
Iran on the
margins of the
P5+1 in Vienna
today,
separate from
our trilateral
meeting. These
engagements
will not
include
military
coordination
or strategic
determinations
about Iraq’s
future over
the heads of
the Iraqi
people. We
will discuss
how ISIL
threatens many
countries in
the region,
including
Iran, and the
need to
support
inclusivity in
Iraq and
refrain from
pressing a
sectarian
agenda."
Earlier on
June 16 a US
Senior
Administration
Official told
reporters the
issue does not
give Iran more
leverage,
while talks
about Iraq may
occur "on the
margins," that
is separate
from the P5+1
process.
Asked of
timing, the US
official said
"we are all
focused on
July 20... we
can get this
done."
The official
said that
"World Cup
fever has
presented
itself here in
Vienna." Today
Iran plays
Nigeria, and
the US plays
Ghana (with
Vice President
Biden in
attendance).
Asked again
about Iraq,
the official
said that the
situation in
Ukraine hadn't
impacted the
P5+1 talks.
Inner City
Press wonders
if, with the
blocking in
the UN
Security
Council of
Russia's
proposed
statement on
the attack on
its embassy in
Kyiv, that
might change.
And as set
forth before,
how Francois
Hollande's and
Laurent
Fabius' open
lobbying for
BNP Paribas
and its
violation of
Iran sanctions
might have an
impact as
well.
Fabius
has said that
Iran wants
hundreds of
thousands of
centrifuges
and that
France is
drawing the
line there,
copying itself
from 2013.
But how
strange:
Francois
Hollande and
Fabius defend
BNP Paribas'
violation of
Iran
sanctions,
while loudly
playing
hardball.
Playing is the
operative
word.