Newly-elected Iranian President Hassan Rouhani is insisting his decision to not meet with President Obama at the United Nations on Tuesday wasn’t personal.
“We have no problem shaking Mr. Obama’s hand or negotiating, but we need a plan of action to ensure these meetings create the conclusions that we want,” he told a group of American media representatives, including NBC News on Wednesday. “We did not have enough time to make it happen.”
Despite the recent warming of relations and speculation that the two leaders could meet face-to-face, two senior U.S. administration officials said Wednesday that the Iranians were not ready to have such a meeting and that the encounter proved “too complicated” for Iran back home. They added Obama had been open to an informal meeting.
Rouhani skipped the U.N. luncheon where many had speculated the two might shake hands.
It would have been the first direct interaction between a U.S. president and an Iranian leader since the 1979 revolution in Iran. Secretary of State John Kerry is still scheduled to meet with Iranian foreign minister Mohammed Javad Zarif on Thursday for preliminary talks in what both sides have signaled they hope will become full negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program and international sanctions.
Rouhani said it was two days ago that the U.S. proposed the meeting. “This is a very sensitive subject,” Rouhani said. “We have not talked at that level for 35 years. We must take these steps carefully.”
White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said on Wednesday that the president is not disappointed that Rouhani turned down the offer to meet.
Obama “was open to the possibility of an informal encounter with President Rouhani and remains open to that, as he has, broadly speaking, since he took office,” said Carney.









