Trump accuses France's Macron of sending 'mixed signals' to Iran
[WASHINGTON] US President Donald Trump on Thursday said no one is authorised to speak to Iran on behalf of the United States, and he accused French President Emmanuel Macron of sending "mixed signals" to Tehran over possible talks.
"I know Emmanuel means well, as do all others, but nobody speaks for the United States but the United States itself," Mr Trump said in a series of tweets.
It was not immediately clear what Mr Trump was referring to and the White House declined to comment, but a report earlier this week said Mr Macron had invited Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to this month's G7 summit to meet Mr Trump. A French diplomat denied the report on Wednesday.
European leaders are seeking to defuse the brewing confrontation between Tehran and Washington after Mr Trump pulled out of the Iran nuclear last year and renewed sanctions in an effort to push a new deal under the US Republican president.
Tehran has responded with a series of moves, including seizing a British tanker in the Gulf and retreating from some of its commitments to limit its nuclear activity made under the deal.
The crisis is expected to be a focus at the G7 summit later this month. Mr Trump and his administration officials have previously said Mr Trump is open to talks with Iran and that the United States does not want war with Iran.
REUTERS
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
US mulls first green-bond sales to tap a US$2.6 trillion market
US factory activity shrinks with price gauge highest since 2022
Hong Kong faces uphill battle to lure back Chinese tourists
Weak yen boosts tourist wallets in Japan
Gas prices are putting Washington’s boldest climate policy at risk
India collects record 2.10 trillion rupees as goods and services tax in April