Jerusalem – Benjamin Netanyahu Making A Direct Appeal On Iran To US Voters

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    A photograph supplied by the Israeli Government Press Office (GPO) shows Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he observes an army infantry exercise with Chief of Staff, Lieutenant General Benny Gantz (R) taking place on the Golan Heights, 11 September 2012. EPA/AVI OHAYON / GOVERNMENT PRESS OFFICEJerusalem – Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a direct appeal to American voters on Sunday to elect a president willing to draw a “red line” with Iran, comparing Tehran’s nuclear program to Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh and reminding Americans of the devastating repercussions of failed intelligence.

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    His remarks were an impassioned election-season plea from a world leader who insists he doesn’t want to insert himself into U.S. politics and hasn’t endorsed either candidate. But visibly frustrated by U.S. policy under President Barack Obama, the hawkish Israeli leader took advantage of the week’s focus on unrest across the Muslim world and America’s time-honored tradition of the Sunday television talk shows to appeal to Americans headed to the polls in less than two months.

    Tehran claims its nuclear program is peaceful. Netanyahu said the U.S. would be foolish to believe that, using football metaphors and citing example of past terrorist attacks on U.S. soil to appeal to his American audience.

    “It’s like Timothy McVeigh walking into a shop in Oklahoma City and saying, ‘I’d like to tend my garden. I’d like to buy some fertilizer … Come on. We know that they’re working on a weapon,'” Netanyahu said.

    The past week, Netanyahu has called on Obama and other world leaders to state clearly at what point Iran would face a military attack. But Obama and his top aides, who repeatedly say all options remain on the table, have pointed to shared U.S.-Israeli intelligence that suggests Iran hasn’t decided yet whether to build a bomb despite pursing the technology and that there would be time for action beyond toughened sanctions already in place.

    Netanyahu disagrees, estimating that Iran is about six months away from having most of the enriched uranium it needs and warning that letting them reach the “goal line” would have disastrous consequences.

    Obama’s Republican opponent, Mitt Romney, has said he is willing to take a tougher stance than Obama against Iran, although his campaign has declined to provide specifics. He has also aligned himself personally with Netanyahu, casting the Israeli leader as a longtime friend.

    Meanwhile, Obama is reported to have a strained relationship with Netanyahu, chastising Israel for continuing to build housing settlements in areas disputed with the Palestinians.

    America’s ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice, responded Sunday by saying there is “no daylight” between the U.S. and Israel and that Obama “will do what it takes” to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. But, she told CNN, “we are not at that stage yet.”

    “Our bottom line — if you want to call it a red line — the president’s bottom line has been that Iran will not acquire a nuclear weapon, and we will take no option off the table to ensure that it does not acquire a nuclear weapon, including military,” Rice later told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

    But Netanyahu has said that’s not enough and employed historical examples known to most Americans to make his case: President John F. Kennedy’s demand that the Soviets remove its missiles sites in Cuba “maybe purchased decades of peace,” Netanyahu said. And absent a similar “red line,” then-Iraqi President Saddam Hussein faced a U.S. attack in 1991 after invading Kuwait.

    “Maybe that war could have been avoided,” Netanyahu said.

    Netanyahu also pointed to America’s inability to prevent the 9/11 hijackings as proof that intelligence can fail.

    He insisted that his motivations were not political but reflected a key sense of urgency. Israeli officials point to Iranian enrichment of uranium, a key ingredient in building a bomb, the movement of Iranian nuclear research facilities to fortified underground bunkers impervious to attack and Iran’s refusal to open its facilities to U.N. inspectors.

    “I think that there’s a common interest of all Americans, of all political persuasions, to stop Iran,” he said. “This is a regime that is giving vent to the worst impulses that you see right now in the Middle East.”

    Rice said the window to act “is not infinite” but that the sanctions “reached their high point in July.” Rice says that for the first time the Iranian economy is shrinking at a rate of negative 1 percent, Iranian oil production has dropped 40 percent over the last several months and their currency has plummeted 40 percent in that time as well.

    “This pressure, even to use the Iranians own words, is crippling,” Rice said, adding “What is clear is that Iran does not have a nuclear weapon.”

    Netanyahu and Rice spoke on CNN’s “State of the Union” and NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Rice also spoke on Fox News Sunday.


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    23 Comments
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    Facts1
    Facts1
    11 years ago

    Gotta do what you gotta do.

    Rather safe then sorry.

    11 years ago

    Last week the israeli PM said he is not Interjecting himself in american politics, now he contradicts himself! well which one is it Mr PM?, remember every action has a reaction!

    victorg
    victorg
    11 years ago

    Netanyahu is very gutsy openly siding against the guy who (chas veshalom) is likely to be the president of the United States for the next 4 years!

    11 years ago

    “Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a direct appeal to American voters on Sunday to elect a president willing to draw a “red line” with Iran.”

    Well, if *that* is not direct intervention in the domestic affairs of a foreign country I don’t know what is.

    11 years ago

    Nethanyahu is the best prime minister Israel has ever had.

    He calls Obama’s bluff and knows that our history will not be defined by who wins the White House in 2012.

    He is seeing beyond present day politics and petty bickering.

    Iran is deadly serious and the only thing they will ever understand is a punch in the face and broken teeth. They are asking for a lesson and Netanyahu will give it to them.

    A gut yor alemen.

    FrumJew
    FrumJew
    11 years ago

    Netanyahu is speaking very publicly, so as to pressure Obama. The more the media talks about “to bomb or not to bomb”, the more Obama is pressured to do for Israel.

    FirshtRadzivil
    FirshtRadzivil
    11 years ago

    This is real Hisgarus Beimus

    BaruchBendit
    BaruchBendit
    11 years ago

    If Netenyahu is so worried about defending Israel, why did he pass up a golden opportunity to draft and pass a law that would revoke the automatic draft-exemptions of 60,000 Haredim?

    11 years ago

    very dangers !!!!

    looks like he decided he has nothing to lost if that’s the case Israel is in very bad shape

    qazxc
    qazxc
    11 years ago

    The memory of Bush’s folly of invading Iraq looking for nonexistent WMD is still fresh in the minds of the American electorate.

    How are they to believe that the Iran program is real after all the hype that caused the U.S. to invade Iraq at huge costs in both blood and money?

    Netanyahu may have just bitten off more than he will be able to chew. Alienating a sitting president, even one with only a 50% – 50% chance of reelection is risky business. If Obama wins Israel could be in for rougher waters. If he loses, Bibi just made many life long enemies in the Democratic party.

    11 years ago

    Netanyahu is wrong on trying to pressure the USA into a war with Iran. The gentiles still have not forgiven EY, for the attack on the USS Liberty. If a war in the Persian Gulf commences, there will be many U.S. naval casualties. Also, the price of gasolene will double or triple, and the average gentile will blame the Jews in the USA, as well as EY. In addition, there won’t be hundreds of Israeli civilian casualties, but thousands, as Iran will launch thousands of missiles, as will Hezbollah, and perhaps others. Not all of them can be stopped with an anti-missile shield. What is Netanyahu’s motivation for beating the war drums. Iran doesn’t even have one nuclear bomb, whereas EY has dozens. Netanyahu has embarked on a very dangerous adventure; over 70% if the Israeli public is against his advocating a showdown with Iran. Last, since Obama will probably be reelected, he won’t forget Bibi’s stance on Iran. If the two of them had bad relations in the past, those relations will be far worse in the future!

    kanga
    kanga
    11 years ago

    Go Netanyahu!!!!! U show ’em!!

    11 years ago

    Netanyahu is putting his faith in the dignity of his own office and not in the dignity of Judaism. His reality is that he is desperate because he has little Torah and G-d is doing his best to show Bibi that the future is in G-ds hands.

    vitriol
    vitriol
    11 years ago

    Netanyahu apparently and with good reason does not trust Obama. There is a vague window of possibility that Obama does not feel that he needs to meet with Netanyahu for reassurance and thereby alert Iran that they are collaborating. Its possible that the CIA has information about possible terror attacks against US interests should Iran think that a military strike is imminent. Iran might choose to strike the first blow in such a case in an attempt to make the US strike look retaliatory and to possibly have a chance to draw in other Muslim nations. On the other hand, if the US (and Israel) strike only Iran first, then it would not appear so much to be a blow against Islam and the Arab nations might let Iran go it alone. This is the problem when you have a President like Obama. You never really know where he stands or if he is your friend or not.

    Reb Yid
    Reb Yid
    11 years ago

    When the lives of millions of yidden are on the line, you don’t pay attention to protocol. You go to the President and demand that he bomb the rail lines to the concentration camps….er, I mean the Iranian nuke facilities.

    I thought we learned this lesson 70 yrs ago.