International Politics

Rand Paul angles to become Trump’s emissary to Iran

Over a round of golf this past weekend, Sen. Rand Paul asked President Donald Trump’s blessing for a sensitive diplomatic mission.

Paul proposed sitting down with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif to extend a fresh olive branch on the president’s behalf, according to four U.S. officials. The aim: to reduce tensions between the two countries. Trump signed off on the idea.

With Zarif in New York City this week for U.N. meetings and private sitdowns with journalists and think-tank experts, the prospect of the dovish Kentucky senator serving as the administration’s chief diplomatic emissary has rankled many administration officials, who are expressing concern that Paul’s intervention threatens to scuttle the president’s “maximum pressure” campaign against Tehran.


It is unclear whether the senator will meet with Zarif. He and his office declined multiple requests for comment. But the president’s willingness to tap Paul as the go-between with a top Iranian official is a demonstration both of his unorthodox approach to foreign affairs and his continuing desire, even as his aides threaten to squeeze Iran until it capitulates to U.S. demands, to entice the Islamic Republic’s leaders to the negotiating table.

Trump has been attempting to start negotiations with Iran for months, a campaign that has included letters to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, an attempt to use Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe as an emissary to Tehran, and public comments expressing his desire to talk. Some Iranian officials have said that they are open to negotiations, but only after the administration removes sanctions. Khamenei, however, has likened talking with the U.S. to drinking “poison.”

See also  Greg Casar sets up primary fight with Lloyd Doggett after declining run in newly drawn Texas district

Paul, along with Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and David Perdue (R-Ga.), played a round of golf with the president on Saturday at his club in Sterling, Va.

The libertarian-leaning Paul has long been wary of U.S. foreign intervention, and he’s clashed with Trump administration officials over the possibility of a military conflict with Iran. When Trump last month called off retaliatory military strikes against Iran after an Iranian military official downed a U.S. drone over international waters, Paul went on the president’s favorite television network to offer unqualified praise. “It really takes a statesman to show restraint amidst a chorus of voices for war,” Paul told Fox News’ Martha MacCallum.

He also criticized the administration’s policy, arguing that Iranians view the punishing sanctions imposed by the Trump administration as “an act of war.”


Knife-Wielding Intruder Confronts Armed Homeowner — Only One of Them Walks Away
A Crash Took Her Husband: Days Later, the Search for Her Son Ended in Tragedy
Democrats confront ‘cringe mountain’ in bid to engage young voters
MLB Fans May Need Six Subscriptions for All the Action Next Season — Here’s the Cost
NY Woman Visits Public Diamond Mine in the South, Finds 2.3-Carat Gem for Her Engagement Ring
Newsom’s office continues to mock Trump using his social media writing style: ‘TINY HANDS’
Zelenskyy to meet with Trump in Washington, DC following US-Russia talks
Trump reveals 10 striking takeaways from Putin summit in Hannity interview
GOP praises Trump’s posture during Alaska summit, Dems cry foul over Trump’s apparent coziness with Putin
Air Force tightens rules on transgender airmen; supporters say it prioritizes readiness: report
Trump-Putin summit top takeaways: Jumping the line, Russia hoax, and Moscow visit?
Controversial New Orleans mayor indicted for alleged illicit relationship with taxpayer-funded bodyguard
Power Move? Trump Meets Putin at Alaska Summit, Yanks His Hand Noticeably Hard
Manhattan woman finds 2.3-carat diamond for engagement ring after three-week quest
Uber driver accused of sexually assaulting young woman now faces ICE arrest detainer after overstaying visa
See also  The Congress to prison to Congress pipeline

Paul has long been at odds with the team of hawks serving at the top echelons of the Trump administration, including National Security Adviser John Bolton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. At the outset of the administration, he led a public campaign against the administration’s current special envoy to Venezuela, Elliott Abrams, when his name was floated as a candidate for deputy secretary of state — and helped to scuttle his candidacy by bashing his hawkish views in an appearance on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News show, according to a source directly familiar with the events.

Earlier this year, Paul pressed Pompeo on whether the administration believes it has the authority to battle the Iranian regime under a 2001 law that allowed the U.S. to pursue the fight against al Qaeda and affiliated terrorist groups in Afghanistan and beyond.

When Pompeo tried to sidestep the question, Paul warned the administration not to pursue such a conflict, at least not without Congress’ imprimatur.

“You do not have the permission of Congress to go to war with Iran,” Paul told Pompeo during the April hearing on Capitol Hill. “Only Congress can declare war.”

The move smacks of desperation, said Mark Dubowitz, head of the hawkish Foundation for Defense of Democracies, which has pushed for a hard line on Iran.

read more

Share this article:
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter