27 Nov 2024
Tuesday 23 October 2018 - 10:50
Story Code : 324258

Bolton: US, Russia will benefit from sanctions on Iran



Sputnik - National Security Advisor John Bolton has been holding a series of talks in Moscow with senior Russian officials including Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev.




Speaking inMoscow, Bolton said that Washington's sanctions againstTehran have had an impact onthe global oil market, and that both Russia and the US would benefit fromUS sanctions policy.
Saying that the US has increased its own oil production and exports, Bolton said that Russia too stood tobenefit fromthe decline ofIranian output. "It's true that Russia asan oil exporter will benefit fromrising oil prices. And we [also] benefit asoil producers. But intime, the market will level off," Bolton said, speaking toRussian radio station Echo Moskvy.


According tothe senior US official, US sanctions againstIran are aimed atputting "maximum pressure onTehran tochange their behavior."

Commenting onother issues, including the possibility ofanother summit betweenPresidents Putin and Trump, Bolton said a one-on-one summit likethe one that took place inHelsinki earlier this year was possible.

Regarding claims ofRussian meddling inthe US elections, Bolton said he told his Russian counterparts that such meddling, if it took place, was unlikely tohave had any real impact.

As far asRussian-US arms treaties were concerned, Bolton said that Washington has yet tofinalize its position onwhether toextend the New START arms control treaty, and still has time todo so.

Boltonmetwithhis counterpart Nikolai Patrushev onMonday inMoscow fordiscussions onissues ranging fromthe possible US withdrawal fromthe Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) toIran, North Korea, Syria, Afghanistan, Ukraine and the fight againstinternational terrorism, drug-trafficking and illegal migration.
In addition toEcho Moskvy, Bolton also spoke toKommersant, telling the Russian business newspaper that Washington has not yet decided whether it will deploy missiles inEurope if it goes ahead and withdraws fromthe INF Treaty. The US official also complained aboutthe fact that China, another major nuclear power, is not a party tothe INF Treaty, despitethe fact that betweenone third and half ofits ground-based ballistic missiles are inthe short and intermediate range categories proscribed underthe Russian-US treaty.


Calling the INF Treaty an "anomoly," Bolton noted that while the treaty prohibits the deployment ofUS ground-based cruise missiles inPoland, it does not prevent them frombeing deployed byUS ships inthe Baltic Sea. At the same time, he complained aboutRussia's alleged violations ofthe treaty.

On Saturday, President Trump announced that the US was considering withdrawing fromthe INF, a landmark 1987 arms treat aimed atreducing the danger ofnuclear war inEurope. The announcement prompted Washington's European allies including Germany, France, Italy, and Spain tovoice security concerns, withRussian officialswarningthat Moscow would do everything necessary topreserve strategic parity incase ofa US exit fromthe treaty.

President Trump unilaterally withdrew the United States fromthe Joint Comprehensive Plan ofAction (JCPOA) Iran nuclear deal inMay, and promised tointroduce several waves oftough US economic sanctions againstTehran, including restrictions targeting Iran's energy sector and sanctions penalizing foreign companies doing business withIranian energy firms. After the US withdrawal fromthe nuclear deal, Russia, China, and the European signatories tothe JCPOA have scrambled totry tosalvage the treaty. This has includedmeasurestobypass the impending US energy sanctions, set togo intoeffect next month.

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