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Netanyahu giving interviews to international press
Photo: GPO

Netanyahu warns West: Don't 'surrender' to Iran in nuclear deal

In interviews to broadcasters from P5+1 states, prime minister urges a deal with Tehran similar to that with Damascus.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged international negotiators on Sunday not to "surrender" to Tehran, as he launched a media blitz three weeks ahead of a deadline for an Iranian nuclear deal.

 

 

In interviews to broadcasters from the six world powers involved in the talks, Netanyahu reiterated Israel's long-held demand Iran be stripped of its uranium enrichment and other technologies, saying that to do otherwise would leave nuclear weaponry within reach.


Photo: GPO

 

"What it would mean is Iran at any time could kick the (foreign nuclear) inspectors aside or deceive them - it's done that in the past - and go rush to make the enriched uranium that is necessary to make atomic bombs," he told Britain's Sky News, according to a transcript published by his office.

 

"And they can do that within weeks or months. That's bad for Britain, bad for Europe, bad for the United States, bad for Russia, bad for China, very bad for Israel, bad for the Arabs too - bad for the world."

 

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He has urged that any deal with Iran resemble the removal of Syria's declared chemical weapons under international agreement, saying such a deal is working in Syria "because you’re not relying on inspectors. You’re relying on removal. You dismantle or you destroy and you remove what’s not destroyed," he told CNN. 

 

The six powers' overarching goal is to extend the time Iran would need to make an atom bomb, if it chose to do so. To this end, they want it to cut down the number of uranium centrifuges in operation. Iran would get sanctions relief in return.

 

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But Netanyahu vehemently opposes allowing Iran to keep even one centrifuge.

 

"They say, well, maybe they'll have also several thousand, many thousands of centrifuges not spinning but in formaldehyde, sort of, or locked under lock and key. Okay. One day, Iran decides to break the lock and key, breakout as they say, put all these thousands of centrifuges together and they'll have the wherewithal to make a nuclear bomb in a very short time," he told Sky.

 

Netanyahu spoke with CNN (US), Sky (Great Britain), ARD radio (Germany), CCTV (China), France 24 and Channel 1 Russia. 

 

Photo: GPO

 

Western diplomats say an extension to the deadline is possible - but, some diplomats add, only if there is a deal in sight, not if there is no progress at all.

 

Israel is not a party to the Iranian nuclear diplomacy. But Netanyahu has lobbying clout in foreign capitals given Israel's fear of its arch-enemy gaining the means to endanger its existence - and its veiled threats to launch a preemptive war.

 

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A delegation of Israeli intelligence and nuclear experts led by Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz and National Security Adviser Yossi Cohen left on Sunday for talks with their US counterparts in Washington.

 

Looming deadline 

Speaking to Reuters, an Israeli official said the delegation would "present Israel's views about a possible Iranian deal" and deemed the visit "urgent" given the impending July 20 deadline.

 

Iran denies seeking the bomb and has weathered several rounds of UN Security Council sanctions meant to curb its sometimes secretive nuclear program. The Iranians point to Israel's assumed atomic arsenal as the real regional menace.

 

Photo: GPO

 

Both Tehran officials and diplomats from the six powers negotiating with Iran say they are still hoping to meet the deadline.

 

But there is little indication so far they have succeeded in bridging any of the vast gaps in expections of what a deal should look like in five rounds of talks held so far this year.

 

The West has accused Iran being unrealistic and inflexible, while diplomats from Tehran have said their opponents are making excessive demands.

 


פרסום ראשון: 06.29.14, 19:49
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