Financial Times Europe - 12.09.2019

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Thursday12 September 2019 ★ FINANCIAL TIMES 3


I N T E R N AT I O N A L


TO B I A S B U C K —BERLIN


Hong Kong democracy activistJoshua
Wong as called on Germany and otherh
European countries to step up their
support for the anti-governmentpro-
tests n the city and denounced thei
“increasingly barbaric level of force”
faced by the demonstrators.


Speaking during a visit to Berlin that has
already angered the Chinese authori-
ties, Mr Wongyesterday urged Europe
to halt the export of crowd control
equipment to theHong Kong olice andp
make human rights a core part of trade
talks with China. Germany, he added,
had in the past supplied water cannons
and other riot control gear.
“We are strongly aware that Hong
Kong is the new Berlin in a new cold
war,” Mr Wong said. “Hong Kong people
stand in the front line to confront
authoritarian suppression.”
Hong Kong has been gripped by politi-
cal turmoil for more than three months,
after chief executiveCarrie Lam ried tot
pass a law that would have allowed


criminal suspects to be extradited to
mainland China for the first time. The
bill has since been withdrawn but the
protests have continued unabated.
According to Mr Wong, more than 1,
demonstrators have been arrested.
Mr Wong called for full and free elec-
tions in the city, insisting he protestt
movement would continue despite the
recent political concession by Ms Lam.
“We shall continue our fight for democ-
racy and freedom because we do not
accept that Hong Kong will be trans-
formed into a police state,” Mr Wong
said.
The prominent activist is on aninter-
national tour o drum up support for thet
Hong Kong protests, and is due to travel
to Washington this week. On Monday,
he met German foreign minister Heiko
Maas for talks that drew a formal
rebuke from China. The Chinese foreign
ministry on Tuesday expressed
“extreme dissatisfaction” with Berlin’s
decision to allow Mr Wong to enter the
country, and to meet Mr Maas.
Notebook age 8p

Political unrest


Hong Kong activist calls on


Berlin to support protests


N A J M E H B OZO R G M E H R— TEHRAN


John Bolton, the outgoing US national
security adviser, predicted last year that
the Islamic republic of Iran would not
see its 40th birthday and promised cele-
brations in Tehran to mark its demise.
The dismissal of the hawkish Mr Bol-
ton seven months after the 40th anni-
versary of the 1979 revolution and 18
months into his job has been cautiously
welcomed in Tehran. But officials in the
capital make clear that the departure of
a man long seen as an advocate of war
against Iran and regime change did not
necessarily bring the prospect of talks
with Washington any closer.
“With the firing of the biggest sup-
porter of war and economic terrorism,
the White House faces fewer barriers to
understand the realities of Iran,” Ali
Rabiei, Iran’s government spokesman,
said in a post on Twitter.
Hassan Rouhani, Iran’s president,
said yesterday that the US had to not
only remove “warmongers” — a clear
reference to Mr Bolton — but also aban-
don “its warmongering and ‘maximum
pressure’ policies”. He said Iran would
continue its policy of resistance against
the US pressure.
Majid Takht-Ravanchi, Iran’s ambas-
sador to the UN and a nuclear negotia-
tor, said the dismissal by Donald Trump
was a domestic issue that would not
influence the likelihood of talks.
Relations have been in crisis since Mr
Trump pulled the US out of the 2015


nuclear accord in May last year and
imposed sanctions that deprived the
Islamic republic of much of the reve-
nues it derives from the export of oil.
Sanctions needed to be lifted before
talks could begin, Mr Takht-Ravanchi
said, and that would pave the way for
multilateral negotiations.
“We have repeatedly said... that as
long as unjust sanctions and economic
terrorism of the US administration are
in place, there is no chance for negotia-
tions,” he told a state news agency. “We
can look into it when the unjust sanc-
tions are lifted and [then] hold talks
within 5+1 [major powers] in the same
way we negotiated the nuclear issue.”
Immediately after the sacking, Mike
Pompeo, US secretary of state, raised
the prospect of talks between Mr Trump
and Mr Rouhani t the UN Generala
Assembly this month. He saidthey
could meet with “no pre-conditions”.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s
supreme leader, has to approve any
meetings between Iranian and US offi-
cials and there is no sign he would do so.
“The government of Mr Rouhani has
no permission to hold talks with the US
in New York at any level,” said Hamid-
Reza Taraghi, a politician close to hard-
liners. “The sacking of Mr Bolton may
help Mr Trump not to make hasty anti-
Iran decisions any more but the change
is mainly to deceive the world’s public
opinion and pretend that hawks are
gone from his administration.”
In an effort to keep the nuclear deal
alive, Iran has been in talks with France,
Germany and the UK, the European sig-
natories. US officials have played down
the idea of backing a French proposal to
give Iran a $15bn credit line.
“The US has deprived Iran of about
$100bn of income since reimposing
sanctions. This is what the US has to
change for negotiations to begin instead
of changing a figure like Mr Bolton,” said
Saeed Laylaz, a reformist analyst of
Iran’s political economy.
“The US has to take one serious step in
practice like lifting some sanctions. Oth-
erwise, Iran’s economy has proven resil-
ient despite the pressure which helps
the leaders not to be desperate for nego-
tiations with the US.”
The Iranian rial has fallen 60 per cent
against the US dollar over the past year
and inflation is running at 40 per cent,
but Iran has earned foreign currency
through exports of crude and non-oil
goods. This has allowed for the import of
basic commodities and medicines.
Supermarket shelves remain full and
fuel is readily available.
Iranian officials have long argued that
Mr Bolton’s links to Mojahedin-e Khalq,
an overseas opposition group, and US
reliance on opposition analysis, has dis-
torted the picture of Iran.

D E M E T R I S E VA STO P U LO
A N D A I M E W I L L I A M S— WASHINGTON

John Bolton was seen as an odd choice
when Donald Trump chose the foreign
policy hawk to succeed HR McMaster as
the White House national security
adviser in March 2018.
Aside from his trademark moustache,
which Mr Trump hated, he was a propo-
nent of employing American power
overseas in the kind of muscular way
that Mr Trump had rejected during his
2016 campaign.
Eighteen months later, Mr Bolton met
the same fate as Mr McMaster —fired by
a president who had grown frustrated ta
his efforts to thwart his foreign policy on
everything from Iran and North Korea
to Russia and, just last weekend,
Afghanistan.
When Mr Bolton entered the West
Wing — after being passed over for Mr
McMaster the previous year — there was
no mystery about his views. In newspa-
per articles and appearances on Fox
News, the unrepentant supporter of the
Iraq war had argued that the US should
push for regime change in Iran and
strike North Korea.
In his new role, Mr Bolton argued that
his job was to advocate for the policies of
Mr Trump. But unlike Mike Pompeo,
the equally hawkish secretary of state,
the former Bush administration official
failed to leave his own views at the
White House doorstep and continued to
push Mr Trump in directions that

matched his world view. “Bolton made a
cardinal mistake. He would get ahead of
the president and almost try to box him
in — including on North Korea,” said one
former senior official.
One White House official said Mr
Trump had grown increasingly angry
with Mr Bolton in recent months, chaf-
ing at his hardline views and his reluc-
tance to defend the president. Mr Bolton
was conspicuously absent from TV talk
shows, particularly when Mr Trump
had pushed policieshe opposed, such as
his suggestion at the G7 in Franceto
invite Russia ack into the club.b
The official said Mr Trump decided to
fire Mr Bolton over the past 48 hours
after concluding that “enough was
enough”. The move came just days after
Mr Bolton strenuously opposed a plan
by Mr Trump to bring members of the
Taliban to Camp David, the presidential
retreat, to sign a peace accord to end the
conflict in Afghanistan.
While the Afghanistan dispute was
the final straw, there were already clear
signs that Mr Bolton was under pres-
sure. He did not attend some of Mr
Trump’s meetings with North Korean
dictator Kim Jong Un, including an
important session in Hanoi in February
and when the two leaders met in June in
the demilitarised zone.
There were other signs of conflict.
Shortly after Mr Bolton said in May that
North Korean missile tests had violated
UN sanctions, Mr Trump contradicted
him at a press conference by saying: “I
view it differently.”
The current and former officials said
Mr Trump erupted at Mr Bolton in
March for sparking an embarrassing
controversy over US sanctions on Chi-
nese companies.

The day after the Treasury imposed
sanctions on two Chinese shipping com-
panies accused of helping North Korea,
Mr Trump tweeted he had “ordered the
withdrawal” of the measures. Officials
scrambled to defend the tweet by claim-
ing that he was referring to another
batch of sanctions that were in the plan-
ning stage.
But the officials said Mr Bolton had
led Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury
secretary, to believe that Mr Trump
supported the move to sanction the Chi-
nese businesses when in fact that was
not the case.

“They had tried to misrepresent what
Potus was thinking and Potus got upset,”
said the former official, using a com-
monly used government acronym for
the president of the United States.
The White House official said the inci-
dent became a “sticking point” in the
relationship between Mr Trump and Mr
Bolton since it underscored the view,
held by some other officials, that Mr
Bolton was not an honest broker.
Mr Bolton was not always alone in his
opposition to Mr Trump. After the pres-
ident abruptly called off a military
strike on Iran following the downing of a
US drone, Mr Pompeo joinedMr Bolton
in opposition.
However, in recent months the 70-
year-old, Yale-educated lawyer asw also
at odds with Mr Pompeo.
On Iran, Mr Trump and Mr Bolton

agreed on withdrawing from the 2015
nuclear deal ith Tehran. But Mr Boltonw
wassceptical ofMr Trump’s push to
meet Iranian president Hassan Rou-
hani, just as he did not endorse the three
summits with Mr Kim.
Underscoring the chaotic nature of
personnel decisions in the Trump
administration, Mr Bolton had been
scheduled to appear at a White House
news conference on Tuesday alongside
Mr Pompeo and Mr Mnuchin.Mr Pom-
peo said smilingly that he was “never
surprised” when asked if he had been
caught off guard by the dismissal.
“Bolton had many ideological foes in
the administration, and they seem to
have been successful persuading the
president that Bolton was undermining
him, leaking about him or boxing him
in,” said Jon Alterman, a foreign policy
expert at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies.
The former official said that while
some members of the Trump team were
able to use their relationship with the
president to further their goals, Mr Bol-
ton had gone too far. “Bolton tried to
take advantage and even tried to manip-
ulate Mr Trump. He misunderstood
how to use his power.”
With Mr Bolton having already left
the White House, the focus has shifted
to who will become the fourth person to
hold the critical role.
“It is hard to imagine anyone of seri-
ous accomplishment who would be will-
ing to jump into the breach at this point,
observing the failure of three predeces-
sors,” said James Stavridis, a retired top
US military leader. “This weakens
national security by taking away an
independent voice who was willing to
challenge the president.”

West Wing hawkwore out his


welcome at White House


Bolton and the president were


increasingly at odds, with


Afghanistan the final straw


‘Bolton made a cardinal


mistake. He would get
ahead of the president and

almost try to box him in’


Iran welcomes


dismissal of


Bolton but


resists talks


Removal of sanctions demanded in


return for any negotiations with US


Listening in: John Bolton
looks on as Donald Trump
speaks to the press at the
White House in May
Brendan Smialowski/ AFP/Getty

ecurity adviser’s sackingS


Three Australians, two of whom
also hold UK passports, have been
arrested in Iran amid growing
tensions between Tehran and
London following theseizure f oilo
tankers passing through the Gulf.
Australia’s department of foreign
affairs saidyesterday it was
providing consular assistance to
the families of three Australians
detained in Iran.
“Due to our privacy obligations,
we will not comment further,” the
department said in a statement.
One of the women with dual
nationality is a British-Australian
blogger who was travelling with her
Australian boyfriend who was also
arrested, according to The Times
newspaper in London. The other
holder of both Australian and
British nationality is a female
lecturer at an Australian university.
Jamie Smyth, Sydney

Australian arrests
Tension with UK rises
amid oil tanker dispute

M I L E S J O H N S O N— ROME

Italy’s prime minister has asked for a
“little bit of time” to cut its debt by
investing in economic growth in his
first meeting with the incoming presi-
dent of the European Commission.

Giuseppe Conte, sworn in as leader of
Italy’s ruling coalition this week, said
after his talks with Ursula von der Leyen
that Rome would not pursue policies
that risked financial stability.
“We must make investments that
allow us to direct growth towards
greater employment, and we want to
make a transparent pact with the EU on
what is our programme,” Mr Conte said.
“Our objective is the reduction of
debt,” he said. “We are not saying we do
not want our accounts in order, but we
want to do it through a reasonable
growth and productive investments.”
Italy’s government borrowing costs
have collapsed over the past month on
expectations the coalition will take a far
more conciliatory stance in budget
negotiations with the EU.The previous

coalition of the rightwing League and
anti-establishment Five Star Move-
ment, which clashed with Brussels over
budget plans,collapsed last month.
Mr Conte has stayed on as premier in
the coalition of the pro-EU Democrats
and formerly Eurosceptic Five Star.
Italy has the highest level of public

debt as a proportion of gross domestic
product in the eurozone after Greece,
and has long struggled with low growth.
Expectations of smoother Italy-EU
discussions have been heightened by
the appointment of Roberto Gualtieri, a
veteran member of the European Par-
liament, as Italy’s economy minister.
Paolo Gentiloni, a former Italian prime
minister, has been nominated as Euro-
pean commissioner for the economy.

Budget talks


Italy asks Brussels for time to


cut debt through investment


JA M E S S H OT T E R —WARSAW

Poland’s ruling Law and Justice party
has moved to suspend the parliament
until after a general election, raising
suspicions it plans to delay unpopular
bills until after the vote.

The parliament, in which Law and Jus-
tice has a majority, was due to hold its
final session from yesterday until
tomorrow. But parliamentary business
was being suspended after yesterday’s
session until after the October 13 poll.
Theparliament would then reconvene
for two days to finish the session.
Elzbieta Witek, the Speaker, said the
unprecedented suspension, which has
echoes of the prorogation furore in the
UK, was meant to allow MPs to focus on
campaigning, and denied new bills
would be added to the agenda.
“We have not broken the rules,” she
said, adding the party had not provided
a justification for its request. “This is not
a new sitting.. .It is the same sitting
that has [already] been planned.”
Opposition politicians suspected the

suspension was meant to let Law and
Justice pass bills at the last minute if the
election, which it is expected to win, did
not go as forecast.
Malgorzata Kidawa-Blonska, prime
ministerial candidate of the main oppo-
sition Civic Coalition, told TOK FM
radio: “Law and Justice has some sort of
hidden plan.. .And I do not believe Ms
Witek’s claim that this is being done for
the benefit of MPs: you do not do things
like this just out of love for politicians.”
Opinion polls suggest the nationalist
Law and Justice, accused by Brussels of
undermining the rule of law but popular
for its generous welfare spending, is on
course for a convincing victory.
An aggregation of polls by Ben Stanley
at the University of Social Sciences and
Humanities in Warsaw, put Law and
Justice on 46 per cent, the centre-right
Civic Coalition 29 per cent and a
leftwing coalition 13 per cent.
Borys Budka of Civic Coalition asked
whether the conservative Law and Jus-
tice was planning to drop budget prom-
ises that it could not fulfil.

Law and Justice


Polish ruling party attacked


for suspension of parliament


Giuseppe Conte,
who has kept his
job, has said Italy
wants to ‘make a
transparent pact
with the EU’
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