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At UN, Trump to face questions about Iran, Ukraine, allies

Faced with growing tumult at home and abroad, U.S. President Donald Trump began his three-day visit to the United Nations Monday hoping to lean on strained alliances while fending off questions about whether he sought foreign help to damage a political rival.

U.S. president drops in for 15 minutes to observe session on climate change

Monday's UN session on climate change was not on U.S. President Donald Trump's schedule although he did stop by to observe for about 15 minutes. (Alastair Pike/AFP/Getty Images)

Faced with growing tumult at home and abroad, U.S. President Donald Trump began his three-day visit to the United Nations Mondayhoping to lean on strained alliances while fending off questions about whether he sought foreign help to damage a political rival.

Trump's latest UN trip comes after nearly three years of an "America First" foreign policy that has unsettled allies and shredded multinational pacts.

A centrepiece of this year's UNschedule was Monday's session on climate change. That was not on Trump's schedule although he did stop by to observe for about 15 minutes. His main event will be addressing a meeting about the persecution of religious minorities, particularly Christians, an issue that resonates with Trump's evangelical supporters.

The Republican president arrived in New York on Sunday against a backdrop of swirling international tensions, including questions about his relationship with Ukraine, the uncertain future of Brexit, the U.S. trade war with China, stalled nuclear negotiations with North Korea and a weakening global economy.

The most immediate challenge may be Iran.

Trump will try to convince skeptical global capitals to help build a coalition to confront Tehran after the United States blamed it for last week's strike at an oilfield in Saudi Arabia. Asked as he arrived at the UNbuilding if he will meet soon with Iran's President Hassan Rouhani, Trump replied: "We'll see what happens. We have a long way to go, we'll see what happens."

Trump's fulfilment of a campaign promise to exit the Iran nuclear deal has had wide ripple effects, leading Iran to bolster its nuclear capabilities and dismaying European capitals that worked to establish the original agreement.

French President Emmanuel Macron, in particular, has been trying to lead Trump back to a deal and has suggested that the U.S. president meet with the Iranian leader on the sidelines of the UN meetings.

Trump said Sunday that while "nothing is ever off the table completely" he had no intention of meeting with Rouhani.

Tensions between Washington and Tehran spiked after a Saudi Arabia oilfield was partially destroyed in an attack that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blamed on Iran and deemed "an act of war."

"He needs to win over traditional allies to do what traditional allies do, to band together against common threats," said Jon Alterman of the Centrefor Strategic and International Studies. "The attacks last weekend in Saudi Arabia are precisely the kind of thing that the UN was intended to address, to create rules for international behaviour and opportunities for collective action."

Questions about U.S. and Ukraine

Ukraine also looms large on Trump's schedule. Even one week ago, a one-on-one meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy would have been seen largely as an afterthought.

But Trump's meeting on Wednesday with Zelenskiy will come just days after revelations that the president urged his Ukrainian counterpart in a July phone call to investigate the activities of the son of former vice-president Joe Biden. Trump said he was concerned about corruption, butDemocrats frame his actions as an effort to pressure Zelenskiy to dig up damaging material on a potential 2020 rival.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, seen in Warsaw in August, is scheduled to meet with Trump at the summit. (Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

"What Biden did was wrong," Trump said Monday, again defending his discussion of the issue with Zelenskiy. "We're supporting a country, so we want to make sure that country is honest. One of the reasons the new president got elected is he was going to stop corruption. So it's very important that on occasion that you speak to somebody about corruption."

That pressure is the subject of a whistleblower's complaint that the administration has refused to turn over to members of Congress, setting up a showdown with Democrats.

Trump is defending himself against the intelligence official's complaint, asserting that it comes from a "partisan whistleblower," though the president also said he doesn't know the whistleblower's identity.

He insisted Sunday his conversation with Zelenskiy was "absolutely perfect." But Democrats believe it shows that Trump is emboldened to seek foreign help for his re-election effort.

Trade war troubles

There are plenty of other concerns in the mix during Trump's UN visit, including the U.S. trade war with China.

But China's Xi Jinping is not expected to attend, nor are several other prominent world leaders, including Russia's Vladimir Putin and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Among the nations whose leaders Trump plans to meet in New York: Iraq, Poland, Egypt, Pakistan, South Korea and Japan. He will also meet with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, clinging to power during attempts to steer his nation out of the European Union.

Trump's annual address to the General Assembly is scheduled for Tuesday. Two years ago, he used the moment to deride North Korea's Kim Jong-un as "Little Rocket Man" and threaten to destroy North Korea.

A year ago, he drew laughter when he used his speech to recite his administration's accomplishments.

His theme this year, according to aides, will be to reassert America's determination to uphold its sovereignty and independence, especially on issues of national security.

But others may push a different path.

"There's an attempt to push back against the unilateralism, against the isolationism, against the populism that has affected not only the United States but other countries as well," said Jeffrey Feltman of the Brookings Institution.

"I don't know how effective this will be, but it's an example of how some of our traditional allies are organizing themselves in response to the feeling that the United States, the U.K., that other sort of major engines in the UN system no longer are pressing the accelerator."