US Vice President Mike Pence demanded Thursday that Europeans drop a nuclear deal with Iran and join in seeking to cripple the regime, a cause that united Israel with longtime Arab rivals at a conference in Warsaw. Major European powers sent low-level representation to the US-initiated meeting, suspicious of US President Donald Trump's hawkish impulses and convinced the 2015 deal under which Iran drastically scaled back its nuclear programme is working.
But Pence took direct aim at allies Britain, France and Germany, denouncing their new initiative to let European companies operate in Iran in defiance of unilateral US sanctions. "It's an ill-advised step that will only strengthen Iran, weaken the EU and creates still more distance between Europe and the United States," he said.
"The time has come for our European partners to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal and join with us," he said.
The Warsaw conference is timed just as Iran's clerical regime celebrates 40 years since the Islamic revolution ousted the pro-US shah.
A suicide attack in southeastern Iran on Wednesday killed 27 troops of the elite Revolutionary Guard. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif quickly tried to link the assault to the Warsaw conference, which he earlier dismissed as "another attempt by the United States to pursue an obsession with Iran that is not well-founded".
Pence did not mention the deaths and stopped just short of calling for regime change in Iran, which has been comparatively stable in recent years amid unrest throughout the Middle East.
Pence threatened further US sanctions as "the people of Iran take to the streets" and its "economy continues to plummet".
He accused Iran of plotting a "new Holocaust" with its opposition to Israel and regional ambitions in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen.
"Freedom-loving nations must stand together and hold the Iranian regime accountable for the evil and violence it has inflicted on its people, on the region and the wider world," Pence said.
Pence tacitly acknowledged that Iran is in compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal but said the issue was the accord itself, brokered under Trump's predecessor Barack Obama.
European leaders say the agreement was never meant to address all concerns with Iran and that Tehran is hardly the only problematic player in the region. "Europe is not divided on the issue of Iran. Europe supports the nuclear accord with Iran," German foreign ministry official Niels Annen told reporters.
Another senior official from a major European power said "we strongly disagree" with Pence's remarks and said that other regional issues such as Syria and Yemen would be even more difficult to resolve if Iran is isolated.
"We are strongly against coalition-building and a coercion-only approach," he said.
Pence only briefly mentioned concerns with Iran's Arab adversaries, saying the Trump administration would keep looking at Saudi Arabia's killing of US-based dissident writer Jamal Khashoggi.
But Pence hailed the Arab front against Iran.
Top officials of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain - none of which recognise Israel - sat down with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Warsaw starting with a dinner Wednesday at the Royal Castle.
Netanyahu called the talks a "historical turning point" and voiced hope they could lead to a greater normalisation of relations. "An Israeli prime minister and the foreign ministers of the leading Arab countries stood together and spoke with unusual force, clarity and unity against the common threat of the Iranian regime," Netanyahu told reporters as he arrived for Thursday's main session at a football stadium.
Israel only has diplomatic relations with two Arab countries, neighbouring Egypt and Jordan. But Gulf Arab leaders - especially Saudi Arabia's powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman - have increasingly put the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on the back burner as they instead push to contain historic rival Iran.