Vienna – Israel To Iran: Jewish State Can Defend Itself

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    Israeli soldiers conduct a military exercise in the Israeli-controlled part of the Golan Heights, captured from neighboring Syria in the 1967 war, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. The Israeli military on Wednesday conducted its largest snap drill in years as tensions with Iran over its nuclear program rise and civil war in neighboring Syria rages. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)Vienna – A senior Israeli official warned Iran on Wednesday to stop its “direct and blunt threats” against his country, telling a 155-nation nuclear conference the Jewish state is ready to defend itself against any nation that menaces its existence.

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    Israeli nuclear chief Shaul Chorev avoided any suggestion that his country was contemplating a military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities — a scenario that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is increasingly suggesting may be necessary to stop what he says is Tehran’s path toward atomic arms.

    Still, Chorev’s hard-edged comments to the International Atomic Energy Agency’s annual general conference were another reminder of the enmity between the archrivals that have led to highly charged tensions the United States and others fear may spiral into armed conflict.

    Iran denies any interest in owning nuclear weapons. It says it is enriching uranium solely to make reactor fuel and for medical research. But Israel, which is widely considered to have such arms, asserts Tehran wants ultimately to enrich to levels higher than reactor grade to create weapons-grade material used to arm warheads.

    Israel, the United States, and allies of the two nations have provided intelligence to the IAEA on alleged Iranian nuclear weapons research and development, and while Iran dismisses the intelligence as fabricated, the IAEA takes the allegations seriously.

    Alluding to Iranian statements questioning Israel’s right to exist, Chorev warned that his country “does not remain indifferent in view of such direct and blunt threats.”

    “Israel is competent to deter its enemies and to defend itself,” he told the meeting.

    It has been Israel, however, that has done the most recent threatening. Arguing that diplomatic efforts and economic penalties have had no effect, hard-liners say that may leave military strikes as the only alternative to stopping Iran from developing nuclear weapons.

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

    In the past week, Netanyahu has urged President Barack 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 pursuing the technology, and that there would be time for action beyond toughened sanctions already in place.

    Seeking to prove Israel wrong — and to blunt the possibility of a Middle East War — the United States and five other world powers are attempting to revive stalled high-level nuclear talks with Iran that were downgraded after a Moscow meeting in June ended without resolving a stalemate carried over from previous negotiations.

    A Western diplomat told The Associated Press on Wednesday that U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton will meet with the foreign ministers of Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany Sept. 27 on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly. They are to review the results of talks Tuesday in Istanbul between EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and top Iranian nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili.

    The diplomat, who demanded anonymity because he was not authorized to talk about confidential diplomatic maneuvering with Iran, said Jalili “expressed huge interest in the (negotiating) process” at that meeting. Ashton, in turn said that the Iranians “have to move and make progress” on demands that they curb uranium enrichment that is above reactor fuel grade levels — particular at their underground facility in Fordo, southwest of Tehran, which is most resistant to bomb and missile attack.

    Iran has resisted any attempt to limit enrichment activities, saying it has a right to enrich for peaceful purposes under the Nuclear Nonproliferation treaty.

    In Istanbul earlier Wednesday, Jalili offered few concrete details about the meeting, but said he and Ashton had assessed “common points” reached by technical teams looking into the issue and had discussed “what can be done for a new cooperation.”

    Beyond criticizing Iran for its nuclear defiance, the United States and Israel also accuse the Islamic Republic of military support for Syrian President Bashar Assad and Chorev, the Israeli nuclear chief, said Wednesday that Iran’s “finger prints are manifested in Syria” in Assad’s attempt to put down the increasingly violent 18-month insurgency that has left more than 27,000 dead.

    Like Iran, Syria is also under IAEA investigation for allegedly hiding a nuclear program. The probe was sparked by a 2007 Israeli air strike that the United States says destroyed a nearly finished reactor that would have produced plutonium. Like enriched uranium, plutonium can be used to make warheads.

    Denying any clandestine nuclear work, Bassam Sabbagh, Syria’s chief IAEA envoy, took Israel to task for threatening Iran, its ally, and described the Jewish state’s undeclared nuclear program as posing “a threat to the region’s security and stability.”


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    12 Comments
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    11 years ago

    Bomb the bastards BEFORE it is too late.

    Liepa
    Liepa
    11 years ago

    ‘Alluding to Iranian statements questioning Israel’s right to exist’, such biased reporting from this trashy ‘News Source’.
    Iran has vowed on many occasions to wipe Israel off the map, no secret to anyone, except of course, these choleras from ‘News Source’.

    Nslkpublic
    Nslkpublic
    11 years ago

    Who is talking now of going in war its a problem that a non stable country has nuc. weapons it dosnt matter how strong a country is the first one is the winner even if U.S. will (lets say) fight back israel will still chv”sh be in big trouble so i dont get what do we have out of knowing that israel can fight back???

    TrueGuy
    TrueGuy
    11 years ago

    Doesn’t this look really fishy that Israel is talking a whole day over Iran…. If they would go in war it would have to be quiet… Nor the answer is they are playing around with our minds…!! And its going to come something that not even one had expected. If u thing I’m wrong feel free to Reply. Thanks

    haltkup
    haltkup
    11 years ago

    what good is it to have nukes if they dont deter enemy strikes and you dont even threaten to use them

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    11 years ago

    Israel defend itself? Well, good luck with that.