Archive for November 15, 2013

Senior Israeli minister: Kerry no longer an honest broker between Israel, Palestinians

November 15, 2013

Senior Israeli minister: Kerry no longer an honest broker between Israel, Palestinians – Diplomacy and Defense Israel News | Haaretz.

With regard to Iran, minister suggests that Washington and Tehran have been communicating directly, in secret, to ‘cook up’ a deal that fails to roll back the Islamic Republic’s nuclear weapons potential.

By | Nov. 14, 2013 | 7:53 PM

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, arrives with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Rome

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, arrives with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu before their meeting at Villa Taverna in Rome Oct. 23, 2013. Photo by Reuters

The tension between Israel and the United States intensified this week due to disputes regarding the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks and the effort to find a diplomatic compromise with Iran over its nuclear program. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has attacked what he termed the “bad deal” being formulated with Iran, while other ministers have been critical of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s conduct with regard to the Palestinian talks.

Israeli diplomatic sources say that the atmosphere behind the scenes is even more hostile and tense than it has been portrayed in the media. A senior minister told Haaretz that Kerry can no longer serve as an honest broker between Israel and the Palestinians.

Tensions flared on both tracks almost simultaneously. Last Wednesday, November 6, just before talks with Iran resumed in Geneva, the Americans gave top Israeli officials an update on the planned offer to Iran. Israel understood from the report that the Obama administration planned to offer Tehran significant economic relief by releasing $3 billion to $4 billion worth of Iranian assets that had been frozen in the West. Israel protested what it considered an excessive gesture.

But two days later, on Friday morning, it became clear that the emerging agreement favored Iran even further. It turned out that the six big powers were preparing to offer Tehran additional relief from sanctions in other key areas, such as its petrochemical industry, gold trading, the automotive industry and the import of spare parts for aircraft. Jerusalem estimates the value of these benefits at about $20 billion (while Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz cited a figure double that this week, his colleagues believe his estimate was excessive).

Jerusalem has suspected for some time now that Washington and Tehran have been communicating directly, in secret, ever since the Iranian presidential elections in June and perhaps even earlier. The information that reached Israel last week seemed to confirm that suspicion.

“The administration cooked up something here that cannot be described in words,” said the senior minister. “The Americans tell us that if we are too tough, we’ll undermine Iranian President Hassan Rohani. But that’s nonsense: the only one who counts in Tehran is Ali Khamenei, the spiritual leader. Rohani is merely the pleasant face of the regime, the one that’s sent to the United Nations and the Geneva talks.”

According to the minister, “Khamenei returned to negotiations on his knees due to the severe impact of the sanctions on the Iranian economy. Instead of exerting more pressure to force him into a corner, the Americans decided to give in.”

Netanyahu and his ministers believe, in stark contrast to the Americans and some of the other negotiating powers, that it’s possible to extract a much better agreement from Khamenei, one that will totally halt uranium enrichment at all levels and shut down the centrifuges. They argue that if forced to choose between acquiring an atomic bomb and the survival of his regime – and the economic crisis puts the ayatollahs’ regime in real danger – Khamenei would choose survival. But so far the West has succeeded in extracting very little from him.

“They are talking about suspending operations at the heavy water reactor at Arak for half a year during the interim agreement, but Arak wasn’t in any case meant to start operating until the end of 2014,” the minister said. “The Iranians already converted uranium enriched to a 20 percent level into fuel rods, at their own initiative, after Netanyahu drew his red line during his address at the United Nations in September of last year.”

The minister explained that as long as the Iranians preserve the ability to enrich uranium to 3.5 percent and the centrifuges keep working, they will maintain their ability to produce enough enriched uranium for a nuclear bomb within a few months. Therefore, the proposed settlement does nothing to roll back Iran’s weapons potential.

If that were not enough, the presumption that sanctions will be eased has already translated into improvements for the Iranian economy, the minister said. “The Chinese plan to resume negotiations on contracts with them; European businessmen are already standing in line to close new deals. In fact, Iran’s economy is about to be rescued. It will be very difficult to reverse the situation, especially if the far-reaching concessions that the powers plan to approve later on are actualized.”

According to the Israelis, America is falling into Iran’s trap. Tehran, from the moment even some of the sanctions are lifted, will not hurry to sign a final agreement but will try to drag out the interim arrangement for as long as possible.

Once these details became clear, Netanyahu attacked Obama publicly. At the same time, similar criticism was heard from France, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf emirates. Kerry, who had planned to join the talks in Geneva last Friday to sign on the interim agreement, changed his approach and tried to reopen the terms of the deal. As a result, the Iranians balked, leading to a decision to hold another round of talks next Wednesday, November 20.

But the administration now faces another front, this time at home. With Israel’s quiet encouragement, two new legislative initiatives are making their way through the U.S. Senate. Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez is trying to garner support for imposing a new round of tougher sanctions against Iran, despite Obama’s opposition, and Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham is promoting a bill that would allow the administration to attack Iran (and would also, under one idea being discussed, assure U.S. support if Israel bombs Iran’s nuclear sites). Menendez estimates that his proposal has a majority of 75 out of the 100 senators, while Graham is talking about 95 votes for his bill.

Yet despite all the difficulties the Obama administration seems determined to strike a deal with Iran in the upcoming round of talks. This puts Israel once again in its favorite position – being able to say “We told you so.” It will warn against the damage caused by the agreement and wait for it to collapse in the future. Netanyahu will continue to hint at possible Israeli military action, although it doesn’t seem realistic at the moment.

Parallel to the dispute over Iran, arguments also broke out with Washington over the negotiations with the Palestinians. Israel infuriated the administration by issuing tenders to plan some 24,000 new homes in the West Bank. Jerusalem, meanwhile, was irate over the warnings that Kerry issued in an interview with Channel 2 of a third intifada breaking out if there was no progress in the talks. In this case, Jerusalem points to the secretary of state, and not the president, as the source of the tension.

“This is a direct confrontation with Kerry, not Obama,” said the senior minister. “The diplomatic talks are the secretary of state’s baby. His ideas are simply not connected to reality. He preaches to us and threatens us with a combination of a third intifada, international isolation and legitimizing unilateral Palestinian applications to UN-related organizations. This man is providing legitimacy to Palestinian behavior that deviates from the framework of our agreements. He is not an honest broker.”

One Year Since Operation “Pillar of Defense” – YouTube

November 15, 2013

One Year Since Operation “Pillar of Defense” – YouTube.

In the year prior to the operation, 2,248 rockets were fired at Israel.

In the year since, 33…

The IDF will continue to protect the people of Israel.

חזק ואמץ

(Be strong and brave)

Home Front minister ‘astounded’ at Kerry

November 15, 2013

Home Front minister ‘astounded’ at Kerry | The Times of Israel.

Gilad Erdan says Netanyahu was right to criticize Iran agreement in the works, warns of possible nuclear arms race

November 14, 2013, 7:25 pm

Minister of Strategic Affairs Gilad Erdan on July 8, 2013. (photo credit: Flash 90)

Minister of Strategic Affairs Gilad Erdan on July 8, 2013. (photo credit: Flash 90)

Home Front Defense Minister Gilad Erdan added his voice to the ongoing spat between Washington and Jerusalem, expressing displeasure on Thursday over recent comments by US Secretary of State John Kerry.

“I was astounded to hear John Kerry’s remarks” in which he criticized Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for objecting to the nuclear agreement under negotiation in Geneva between Iran and the P5+1, the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany, Erdan said at a National Security Studies conference in Tel Aviv on Thursday. Kerry had criticized Netanyahu for rejecting the emerging deal before it was signed.

“I have not heard such a claim for many years,” said Erdan. “[Iran] is a country that wants to destroy Israel… What do they expect from an Israeli prime minister? Not to cry out when the knife is in the hand, but only when it is across our throat?”

Last week an alarmed Netanyahu vigorously protested against a deal with Iran, rumored to be in its closing stages, that would have reportedly fallen short of Israel’s demands for removing uranium enrichment facilities along with stockpiles of the material and dismantling a half-constructed heavy water plant that could produce plutonium for a bomb.

Although Iran didn’t accept the deal, on Sunday Kerry questioned whether the prime minister really knew what he was so furiously objecting to, a comment that raised tensions between Israel and the US.

Erdan speculated that even the Iranians were surprised at how easily they have been able negotiate the possible relaxing of sanctions, put in place by the West to squeeze Tehran into rolling back its nuclear program, which Western powers and the UN fear is intended to produce nuclear weapons.

“Iranian Foreign Minister [Mohammad Javad] Zarif and his cohorts are going around Geneva and it is impossible to wipe the smiles off their faces; even they cannot really believe the ease with which they have succeeded in wrecking the sanctions regime,” Erdan said. “It is only thanks to the discussion about the terms being discussed in Geneva, behind closed doors, that we have received an additional delay of several days and perhaps even an improvement in the terms of the agreement.”

The minister also warned that what is signed as an interim deal would likely remain unchanged in the long term, giving Iran the time and opportunity to go nuclear and destabilize the entire region.

“We must not be mistaken — an interim agreement will be a permanent agreement,” he said. “All those involved in the agreement must understand that the moment Iran becomes a nuclear threshold state an arms race will begin in the Middle East and regional uncertainty will increase.”

Meanwhile, US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki dismissed statements made by Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz that suggest the proposed changes in sanctions would benefit the Iranian economy by as much as $40 billion.

Details of the deal offered to Iran were never publicized, but Psaki told reporters that Steinitz’s estimate was “inaccurate, exaggerated and not based in reality.”

Another round of negotiations between Iran and world powers is scheduled for next week.

Kerry: Any Iran nuclear deal will be ‘failsafe’

November 15, 2013

Kerry: Any Iran nuclear deal will be ‘failsafe’ | The Times of Israel.

Secretary of state says agreement would only be signed if Tehran was guaranteed to refrain from nuclear weapons development

November 14, 2013, 7:28 pm

US Secretary of State John Kerry. (photo credit: AP/Ahmad Jamshid)

US Secretary of State John Kerry. (photo credit: AP/Ahmad Jamshid)

Secretary of State John Kerry said Thursday that any deal negotiated with Iran will be “failsafe” and will guarantee that Tehran will not have the capacity to develop nuclear weapons.

Trying to reassure skeptical lawmakers and US allies, Kerry told MSNBC that the Obama administration wants time to negotiate a deal with Iran that would protect Israel, US interests and the region and “guarantee failsafe that Iran will not be able to have a nuclear weapon.”

Kerry said he spoke shortly before the televised interview with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to assure him that the US understands Israel’s deep concerns about Iran’s nuclear program, which Israel sees as a threat to its security. Kerry said he told Netanyahu that the US and Israel both agree that Iran should not be allowed to become a nuclear-armed nation.

But he said that while the Obama administration wants Congress to hold off on imposing any new sanctions while negotiations continue, Israel wants to see more sanctions to force Tehran to surrender any nuclear weapons capabilities.

Kerry, who has been briefing lawmakers on the most recent negotiations with Iran that took place in Geneva last week, said that Iran would likely view any new US sanctions as a “bad faith” move in the talks and would embolden hard-liners in Tehran who do not want Iran to surrender any nuclear capabilities. Iran insists its program is being developed for peaceful purposes.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press

In Washington, Bennett calls to toughen Iran sanctions

November 15, 2013

In Washington, Bennett calls to toughen Iran sanctions | The Times of Israel.

As Obama urges freeze on new penalties, minister says world ‘two seconds’ from dismantling nuclear program

November 15, 2013, 5:24 am
Naftali Bennett, right, meeting with Senator John McCain in Washington Thursday. (photo credit: Shmulik Almany/Flash90)

Naftali Bennett, right, meeting with Senator John McCain in Washington Thursday. (photo credit: Shmulik Almany/Flash90)

Economics Minister Naftali Bennett told a US crowd on Thursday that a nuclear deal with Iran was possible, but only if the West dialed up sanctions on Tehran instead of offering to ease up on them.

Bennett, dispatched to the US to campaign against a deal between the West and Tehran to lower sanctions in exchange for curbs on nuclear activity, spoke at the Brookings Institute in the capital hours after US President Barack Obama stumped across town against new sanctions on the Islamic Republic.

“I am convinced that if we ratchet up the pressure we can get the right deal,” Bennett said.

The minister said the West nearly had Iran in a chokehold and seemed to be giving in at the wrong time.

“It’s like a boxing match where the other guy’s on the floor and the referee’s counting 6, 7, 8, 9 and at this very last moment we go and pick him up and let off the pressure. Now’s not the time to let up,” he said. “We’re two seconds from achieving our goal of dismantling Iran’s nuclear program.”

Earlier Thursday at a White House news conference, Obama called on Congress to take a wait-and-see approach to efforts for a diplomatic deal before leveling new sanctions on Tehran.

Let’s test how willing they are to actually resolve this diplomatically and peacefully,” Obama said. “We will have lost nothing if, at the end of the day, it turns out that they are not prepared to provide the international community the hard proof and assurances necessary for us to know that they’re not pursuing a nuclear weapon.”

“If we’re serious about pursuing diplomacy, then there’s no need for us to add new sanctions on top of the sanctions that are already very effective and that brought them to the table in the first place,” he added.

Bennett also met Thursday with Senator John McCain, who called US Secretary of State John Kerry “a wrecking ball” for his Iran policy.

Kerry has come under heavy criticism in Jerusalem as well for what is seen as an overzealous drive for a nuclear deal, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday called bad and dangerous.

Bennett’s speech, in which he also touted Israel’s reported destruction of nuclear facilities in Iraq and Syria, came hours after a report by the UN’s atomic agency showed that Iran had actually slowed its nuclear activity.

The International Atomic Energy Agency report claimed Iran’s stockpile of uranium enriched to 20 percent — a form that can quickly be further enriched to weapons-grade — grew by about 10 kilograms (about 20 pounds) since the August report to total a little less than 200 kilograms (440 pounds). That’s about 50 kilograms (110 pounds) less than the amount experts say is needed for further conversion into weapons-grade uranium.

It also reported that Iran installed only 4 additional centrifuges at its main enrichment facility, compared to 1,800 of the enriching machines between May and August, the period covered by the last report. And it said no new advanced centrifuges have been added to the 1,008 it had installed there as of August.

As well, the report noted that “no additional major components” have been installed since its last report at the reactor being assembled at Arak, southwest of Tehran. The six powers are demanding a slowdown of construction of that reactor as part of a first-step deal and ultimately want all construction to stop.

A senior diplomat familiar with the technical aspects of Iran’s nuclear program said the slowdown was not due to technical problems. He demanded anonymity because he was not authorized to comment on the confidential report.

Israel is opposed to any deal at the nuclear talks to lift sanctions on Iran ahead of a complete end to enrichment. Netanyahu said he was “not impressed” to hear that Iran has not expanded its nuclear program.

“They don’t need to,” he said in Jerusalem. “They’ve got enough facilities, enough centrifuges to develop … the fissile material which is at the core of an atomic bomb.”

The confidential report obtained by The Associated Press was circulated among the IAEA’s 35 board member nations. It also was sent to the U.N. Security Council, which has imposed sanctions on Tehran for its refusal to heed its resolutions demanding it stop enrichment, mothball the reactor and curb other activities.

Secret Israeli document to White House shows how US strategy shortens route to Iranian nuclear weapon

November 15, 2013

Secret Israeli document to White House shows how US strategy shortens route to Iranian nuclear weapon.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report November 15, 2013, 9:35 AM (IDT)

IR2 centrifuges at Natanz enrichment plant

IR2 centrifuges at Natanz enrichment plant

Thursday, Nov. 14, Israel sent the White House in Washington a confidential document outlining blow by blow how and when Iran will attain a nuclear weapon if the Obama-Kerry strategy for dealing with the issue goes through. The document was addressed to the National Security Council headed by Susan Rice, debkafile reports. Communications between the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem and the State Department have almost petered out since exchanges between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Secretary of State John Kerry sharpened in tone.

Our Washington sources report that Rice and the NSC have taken a critical stand against the State Department’s policies – not just on the Iranian nuclear question, but also on Saudi Arabia, the Arabian Gulf and Egypt. However, the Israeli document does not take issue directly with Obama administration policies per se. It confines itself to a dry account, step by step, of how the Iranian nuclear bomb program will continue to unfold if the administration’s secret proposition is accepted.

Much of the document’s content is highly technical for the perusal of US experts. It concludes that by putting Iran’s nuclear program on hold for six months, as the administration claims, US diplomatic strategy will shorten its path to a bomb or warhead.
The Israeli document also sought to rebut Kerry’s argument that Netanyahu has been attacking the US proposal without knowing its content.
Washington and Tehran continue to use their back channels of communication to bypass their five fellow world powers before they meet in Geneva for the next round of negotiations with Iran on Nov. 20.

The root of the disagreement between the Obama administration and Netanyahu was illustrated in the exchanges around the visit the nuclear watchdog (IAEA) Director Yukiya Amano paid to Tehran Monday, Nov. 15.

Amano commented to reporters after the visit that he had seen no changes in Iran’s nuclear program in the three months since Hassan Rouhani became president – an indirect dig at the White House insistence that the election of a moderate Iranian president opened the door to a diplomatic solution of the nuclear controversy with Iran. Amano added that 20 percent enrichment of uranium continued.
Both these comments flew in the face of official Washington’s presentation of the state of Iran’s nuclear program. And indeed, 12 hours later, responding to US pressure, “IAEA sources” countered Amano’s comments by stating that Iran had stopped installing the new IR2 centrifuges, proving that enrichment had slowed.

Wednesday, debkafile’s exclusive sources, after checking these statements, found that Iran had been racing ahead without pause in the manufacture of the new centrifuges and installating them at the enrichment plants, but had not so far activated them.

However, they stood ready to be switched on at any moment.

This is the nub of the disagreement between Washington and Jerusalem. Obama and Kerry welcome this situation as a “freeze” for which they are offering a loosening of the sanctions stranglehold on the Iranian economy, if it is extended to other key parts of nuclear program.

Netanyahu sees it as a lease of life for a dangerous process.

The document he has presented to the NSC shows in detail how the US proposal spurred the Iranians into rushing forward the work for finishing all the working parts of their nuclear weapons program and making them ready to go into full operation at a moment’s notice, including enrichment and centrifuge production, as soon as sanctions are eased.

The American proposal, says Israel, has therefore shortened Iran’s road to breakout for a nuclear weapon.