Netanyahu says Israel will do everything to prevent ‘bad’ agreement on Iran’s nuclear program
11/10/2013 12:50
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu expressed satisfaction at Sunday’s cabinet meeting that a deal between the world powers and Iran was not signed over the weekend, but that he was not deluding himself and there was a “strong desire to reach an agreement.”
“I hope this will not be an agreement at any price, and if there is an agreement, it needs to be a good one, not a bad one,” he said
Netanyahu, speaking at the beginning of Sunday’s cabinet meeting held in Sde Boker to mark 40 years to David Ben-Gurion’s death, defined a good agreement as one that would lead to a dismantling of Iran’s nuclear capabilities, and a bad one would be letting Iran retain its nuclear capabilities and “taking the air” out of the sanctions.
The prime minister said that Israel would do everything in its power to prevent a “bad agreement.”
Netanyahu said he spoke over the weekend with the leaders of each of the P5+1 countries, with the exception of China, meaning that he spoke with US President Barack Obama, Russian Presiding Vladimir Putin, French President Francois Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and British Prime Minister David Cameron.
“I told them that according to information that was reaching Israel the agreement was bad and dangerous,” he said. “Dangerous not only to us, but also to them. Dangerous to world peace because it relives the sanctions pressure that it took years to build, and also because Iran would retain it ability to enrich uranium and also to move forward on the plutonium track.”
Netanyahu said that the proposed agreement did not call on the Iranians to dismantle “one centrifuge.”
“I asked the leaders, what is the rush,” Netanyahu said. “I suggested that they wait, that they consider things very carefully. We are taking about a historic process, a historic decision. I requested that they wait.”
Despite the failure of the talks on Saturday, Iran and six world powers said differences had narrowed and they would resume negotiations on November to try to end the decade-old standoff.
But clear divisions emerged among the US and European allies on the final day of the Geneva talks as France hinted that the proposal under discussion did not sufficiently neutralize the threat of an Iranian nuclear bomb.
Netanyahu on Friday denounced the contours of an accord leaked to the media, saying Tehran would be getting “the deal of the century” if world powers carried out proposals to grant Iran temporary respite from sanctions.
Israel, which regards Iran as a mortal threat, has repeatedly suggested it may take military action against Tehran if it does not mothball its entire nuclear program.
Iran dismisses such demands, citing a sovereign right to a nuclear energy industry, and most diplomats concede that, as Tehran has expanded its nuclear capacity exponentially since 2006, the time for demanding a total shutdown has passed.
The Islamic Republic says its activities are purely peaceful and negotiators say they are ready to take the steps necessary for such an agreement if their nuclear “rights are recognized” and world powers reciprocate by easing sanctions.
Reuters contributed to this report.
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November 10, 2013 at 5:01 PM
Netanyahu’s credibility is shot. Time to turn eyes away from this slow motion train wreck.
November 10, 2013 at 5:45 PM
Ok. Where should we look instead, John?
November 10, 2013 at 9:47 PM
“Ok. Where should we look instead, John?”
To life Joe, to life. The world will end for all of us, wether it’s quietly in our sleep or in some major cataclysmic event. None of us know when our number will be called. Time to go outside and enjoy the time we have left. That’s what I’m going to do. I suggest you do the same.
November 10, 2013 at 9:54 PM
John….
I’ve scheduled just that for January…
May you and I both find the inner peace we both yearn for.
Joe
November 10, 2013 at 10:18 PM
God bless you Joe, and all the people of Israel.