Kerry meets Netanyahu before heading to Geneva for Iran nuclear talks

Kerry meets Netanyahu before heading to Geneva for Iran nuclear talks | The Times of Israel.

After scathing remarks on Israel’s West Bank policies, secretary of state, PM discuss possible Tehran deal

November 8, 2013, 7:57 am

US Secretary of State John Kerry during his visit to Israel on November 6, 2013. (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

US Secretary of State John Kerry during his visit to Israel on November 6, 2013. (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

US Secretary of State John Kerry is meeting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the third time in just 72 hours Friday morning as part of his Mideast tour, before heading to Geneva for continued nuclear talks with Iran in the framework of the P5+1 negotiations.

Kerry and Netanyahu’s meeting is being held at Ben-Gurion International Airport and is reportedly set to focus on a possible deal — of “limited” sanctions relief in response to an Iranian agreement to start scaling back nuclear activities — between world powers and Tehran, which Netanyahu labeled a historic mistake. US officials said Kerry will fly to Geneva on Friday to participate in the ongoing negotiations — a last-minute decision that suggests a deal could be imminent.

According to the Telegraph, the deal’s four main points were that Iran would stop enriching uranium to 20 percent and convert its existing stockpile into harmless uranium oxide. Iran would be able to continue enrichment to 3.5% purity necessary for nuclear power plants — but would agree to limit the number of centrifuges running for this purpose. The inactive centrifuges would be able to remain intact. Iran would also agree not to activate its plutonium reactor at Arak, which could provide an alternative route to a nuclear weapon, during the six-month period in which Iran will limit uranium enrichment to 3.5%. Lastly, Iran would agree not to use the advanced IR-2 centrifuges, which enrich uranium three to five times faster than the older model.

In return, the British paper reported, the US “would ease economic sanctions, possibly by releasing some Iranian foreign exchange reserves currently held in frozen accounts” and ease “some restrictions on Iran’s petrochemical, motor and precious metals industries.”

On Thursday night, Netanyahu said the proposals “on the table in Geneva” would “ease the pressure on Iran in return for ‘concessions’ that aren’t concessions at all.” He said Israel completely opposes these proposals, which would leave Iran with a capacity to build nuclear weapons.

“I believe that adopting [these proposals] would be a mistake of historic proportions. They must be rejected outright,” he said at a conference of Israeli and Diaspora leaders in Jerusalem Thursday.

Later, during a meeting with a US Congress delegation, Netanyahu angrily called the offer being discussed in Geneva the “deal of the century” for Iran.

Sanctions had brought Iran to the brink of economic collapse, and the P5+1 countries have the opportunity to force Iran to completely dismantle its nuclear weapons program, the prime minister said. “Anything less than that” would reduce the likelihood of a peaceful solution to the crisis, he said, and Israel would always reserve the right to protect itself against any threat.

In an interview with Israel’s Channel 2 Thursday, Kerry stressed the negotiators in Geneva were requiring Iran to “provide a complete freeze over where they are today.” He argued that it was “better” to be talking to Iran, and seeking to “expand” the time it would take Iran to break out to the bomb, than not to be talking to Iran, and have it continuing to advance its nuclear program. “We have not taken away any of the sanctions yet,” he said. “We will not undo the major sanctions regime until we have absolute clarity,” he said.

If Iran did not “meet the standards” required by the international community, Kerry said, it knew “worse sanctions” were in prospect, and even, as the “clock ticks down… there may be no option but the military option. We hope to avoid that.”

On Thursday, the White House said world powers negotiating with Iran are pursuing an agreement that would offer some sanctions relief if Tehran halts and possibly reverses parts of its nuclear program.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said the first step would deal with Iran’s most advanced nuclear activities.

Carney said that, in exchange, the world powers would consider targeted and limited sanctions relief. He said the relief would be reversible, and sanctions could even be tightened, if Iran breaks its word.

The meeting between Kerry and Netanyahu Friday takes place a day after the secretary of state launched an unusually bitter public attack on Israeli policies in the West Bank, during an interview with Israel’s Channel 2.

The visiting US secretary of state launched a scathing critique of Israel’s West Bank policies, warning that if current peace talks fail, Israel could see a Third Intifada and growing international isolation, and that calls for boycott, divestment and sanctions would increase.

“The alternative to getting back to the talks is the potential of chaos,” Kerry said during the interview. “I mean, does Israel want a Third Intifada?” he asked. “Israel says, ‘Oh, we feel safe today, we have the wall. We’re not in a day-to-day conflict,’” said Kerry. “I’ve got news for you. Today’s status quo will not be tomorrow’s…” Israel’s neighbors, he warned, will “begin to push in a different way.”

“If we do not resolve the issues between Palestinians and Israelis, if we do not find a way to find peace, there will be an increasing isolation of Israel, there will be an increasing campaign of delegitimization of Israel that’s been taking place on an international basis,” he went on.

Turning to settlements and Israel’s presence in the West Bank, he added: “If we do not resolve the question of settlements, and the question of who lives where and how and what rights they have; if we don’t end the presence of Israeli soldiers perpetually within the West Bank, then there will be an increasing feeling that if we cannot get peace with a leadership that is committed to nonviolence, you may wind up with leadership that is committed to violence.”

Israel’s Channel 2 quoted an unnamed official in Jerusalem responding bitterly to the secretary’s remarks, saying Israel would not “succumb to fear tactics” by the secretary, and would not compromise on its vital security needs. The official also reportedly noted that Kerry’s comments would not “encourage” the Palestinians to compromise.

The Israeli official seemed to be angrily echoing Kerry’s own comments in connection with the Iranian nuclear program in late October, when he said that America “will not succumb to those fear tactics” — remarks interpreted by commentators as criticism of Israeli warnings about the dangers of talking to Tehran.

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2 Comments on “Kerry meets Netanyahu before heading to Geneva for Iran nuclear talks”

  1. Ira's avatar Ira Says:

    “if we can not get peace with a leadership which is committed to non-violence….”
    Hoo dat? Which way did e go?
    Oh is that the new specie of fish they found deep in the Amazons?
    Did Mr. Secretary of State actually make that remark with a straight face?
    Never mind….don’t answer that question.

  2. Norm's avatar Norm Says:

    Yes Ira, actually he did say that. Kerry’s little world of reality only has one subject…..Kerry.


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