Netanyahu, sure Iran outreach a ‘fraud,’ orders silence after Obama-Rouhani call
PM informed but not consulted ahead of historic phone conversation, wants to set parameters with Obama for judging Iranian compliance
( “Channel 2 analyst Ehud Yaari said Friday that Rouhani wants to freeze the nuclear program at a level that would enable Iran to break out to the bomb within weeks if it so chose” ).
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday ordered his government colleagues and ambassadors not to respond to the latest, dramatic development in Iran’s outreach to the West, in which President Barack Obama and Iranian President Hasan Rouhani broke a 30-year rift and spoke by telephone on Friday.
Israel was informed ahead of time that the call would take place, but “there was no advance coordination of positions” between Israel and the US on the content of the talk, Israel’s Channel 2 reported Saturday night, adding that Netanyahu remains convinced that Iran’s ostensible outreach is “a fraud” designed to get sanctions lifted without truly abandoning the drive to nuclear weapons.
Netanyahu told his Ambassador to the US Michael Oren to cancel a scheduled interview with Channel 2 news Saturday night, told his Minister for Strategic Affairs Yuval Steinitz also to cancel a planned TV interview, and instructed members of his government to make no comments on the new atmosphere of conciliation in American-Iranian ties.
Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon, who did appear on Channel 2, confirmed he had been told not to comment on the latest moves to advance diplomacy over Iran’s unsanctioned nuclear program, and confined himself to praising Netanyahu for having put the issue on the global agenda in recent years.
Netanyahu’s instructions aimed to prevent members of his government from expressing personal opinions which could raise tensions between Washington and Jerusalem, Channel 10 reported.
Netanyahu’s instructions came hours after Tzachi Hanegbi, a member of the prime minister’s ruling Likud Party and a member of the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, told Israel Radio that unless a substantive nuclear agreement with the Islamic Republic is reached soon, Israel will take the necessary steps to defend itself and remove the threat.
Netanyahu is to address the UN General Assembly on Tuesday — a week after Rouhani made a well-received debut speech there, from which the Israeli delegation, on Netanyahu’s orders, absented itself — the only UN delegation to do so.
Those in Netanyahu’s circle said Saturday night that the prime minister, who has repeatedly urged the world in recent days not to be “fooled” by Rouhani’s charm offensive, sees his role as reminding the international community that Iran is not to be trusted, and that it is seeking to have economic sanctions lifted without abandoning its drive to nuclear weapons. Netanyahu knows he is “in the minority” internationally, but remains determined to stress the imperative for Iran to be judged by deeds not words.
Israel’s position was set out by Netanyahu before Rouhani went to New York and it remained unchanged, the said: unless or until Iran fulfills Israel’s four conditions — halting uranium enrichment, removing already enriched material, shutting down the Fordo facility and discontinuing the plutonium track – there should be no easing the pressure on the regime.
The prime minister was said Saturday to be still finalizing his UN speech. He was flying out to the US late Saturday, and was to meet with Obama at the White House on Monday. He intends to work with Obama on determining parameters by which to measure Iran’s compliance with international requirements.
A Channel 2 poll showed a rise in Israelis’ opinion of Netanyahu’s performance as prime minister, with 35% giving him a good or very good ranking (up from 20% in May), 44% an okay rating, and 21% rating him as poor.
Israeli media reported at the weekend that Iran is very close to bomb-making capability, with an unconfirmed Maariv report even claiming that Tehran already has one bomb.
Channel 2 analyst Ehud Yaari said Friday that Rouhani wants to freeze the nuclear program at a level that would enable Iran to break out to the bomb within weeks if it so chose.
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September 28, 2013 at 11:21 PM
Pundits have opined that Syria’s, not having been brought to heel, after using wmd on it’s own people, established a precedent, regarding wmd use, that left Israel more vulnerable than before. Is only Israel now more vulnerable? World leaders did nothing, other than shunt responsibility from one principal to another, following the Assad massacres. If something happens inside Iran, will the world dither similarly? If something happens within Israel, I’d bet that there’d be no recriminations. Lofty rhetoric not backed by any concrete action would be the likely outcome of a WMD attack against Israel.
September 29, 2013 at 1:05 AM
if wmds are used against Israel the middle east will glow in the dark.Israel will not stand for wmd being used against her. It will be the beginning of the end !
September 29, 2013 at 5:43 AM
I would forcast that the glowing would start before those wmd’s get off in our direction.
September 29, 2013 at 7:27 AM
Israel is a little thornier than a quiet suburb of Damascus
September 29, 2013 at 2:48 AM
The only thing left for Israel , playing hard ball.
September 29, 2013 at 4:25 AM
I agree, and post haste.
September 29, 2013 at 4:34 AM
And the end of the fight is a tombstone white, with the name of the late deceased, And the epitaph drear: ‘A fool lies here who tried to hustle the East.’
— (Joseph) Rudyard Kipling The Naulahka, ch.5.
September 29, 2013 at 5:01 AM
More waste of time.