President Barack Obama and his Iranian counterpart,
Hasan Rouhani,
won’t be sharing a history-making handshake at the United Nations General
Assembly this year after all, U.S. officials said on Tuesday.
The White House had proposed “an encounter” on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in New York — something well shy of a formal sit-down meeting. But officials heard back on Tuesday that even a more low-key conversation was “too complicated for Iranians to do at this point,” according to one of the officials.
The officials — who spoke on condition that they not be identified by name — said Secretary of State John Kerry will go ahead with talks with his Iranian counterpart on resolving the tense standoff over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
But for Obama and Rouhani “there will be no meeting,” one U.S. official said.
After days of trying to work out the diplomatic logistics of even a casual grip-and-grin, "it was clear that it was too complicated for them," the official said.
"The Iranians have an internal dynamic that they have to manage, and the relationship with the United States is clearly quite different than the relationship that Iran has with other Western nations," a senior administration official said.
That appeared to be a reference to the political power of hard-liners inside Iran.
The news came just a few hours
after Obama
said he was “encouraged” by Rouhani’s relatively conciliatory
rhetoric since taking office and tasking Kerry with resuming the nuclear
negotiations.
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