Washington – Netanyahu: World Powers Must Demand Iran Change ‘Genocidal’ Anti-Israel Policy

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    Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem December 8, 2013. REUTERS/Uriel Sinai/Pool Washington – Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday urged the United States and other world powers to demand that Iran change what he called its “genocidal” anti-Israel policy as part of negotiations with Tehran on a final nuclear deal.

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    Cautioning the international community to “beware” of Iran’s intentions, Netanyahu underscored his deep skepticism over an interim deal reached with Iran last month in Geneva and insisted that any long-term accord must bring about the “termination of Iran’s military nuclear capability.”

    Netanyahu, speaking via satellite link from Jerusalem, warned a foreign policy forum in Washington: “The jury is still out. Iran is perilously close to crossing the nuclear threshold.”

    He spoke a day after U.S. President Barack Obama, addressing the same forum, defended diplomacy with Iran but sought to reassure Israelis with a pledge to step up sanctions or prepare for a potential military strike if Tehran fails to abide by the pact.

    Netanyahu, who had denounced the November 24 six-month interim deal as a “historic mistake,” avoided direct criticism of Obama’s engagement with Iran – just as he did during a visit to Israel by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry last week.

    But the hawkish Israeli prime minister added a new twist to his pressure campaign, aimed a ensuring that world powers seek maximum concessions from Iran in the next round of negotiations.

    “This is a regime committed to our destruction and I believe there must be an unequivocal demand to change its genocidal policy,” Netanyahu told a largely pro-Israel audience. “That is the minimal thing that the international community must do when it is negotiating with Iran.”

    Netanyahu accused Iran of supplying thousands of rockets to anti-Israel Islamist groups he called Tehran’s “terrorist proxies,” including Hezbollah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

    He cited a recent comment by Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei calling Israel the “rabid dog” of the Middle East.

    However, Iran’s new president, Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate, has steered clear of the Holocaust-denial rhetoric of his predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in reaching out to the West. Rouhani has denied that Iran seeks a nuclear bomb, despite Israeli and Western suspicions to the contrary.

    STRAINED RELATIONS

    Relations between Israel and the United States, traditionally the closest of allies, have been strained by the preliminary agreement, which was designed to halt advances in Iran’s nuclear program and buy time for further negotiations.

    Speaking at the Brookings Institution’s annual Saban Forum on the Middle East, Netanyahu insisted that the U.S.-Israeli relationship is an “indispensable alliance,” but he also made clear that differences with Obama remain over Iran.

    He said a diplomatic solution was preferable but that a credible military threat and tough sanctions were necessary for diplomacy to succeed.

    Netanyahu said steps must be taken to prevent further erosion of existing sanctions and suggested that imposing further sanctions during the talks might lead to a “better deal.”

    There is concern within the Obama administration that Netanyahu’s vocal criticism of the Geneva deal could add impetus to calls by pro-Israel U.S. lawmakers for new sanctions.

    U.S. officials have appealed to Congress not to push for new punitive measures during negotiations, saying it could alienate both Iran and other countries involved in the talks by making Washington appear to be acting in bad faith.

    Still, Israel’s fierce opposition to the Geneva deal has raised speculation – fueled by regular public hints from Netanyahu – that it might carry out long-threatened unilateral strikes against Iran.

    In his remarks, Netanyahu reiterated his vow that Israel must have the ability to “defend itself by itself,” but he issued no direct threats.

    While Israel is widely assumed to have the region’s only nuclear arsenal, many independent analysts believe it lacks the conventional clout to deliver lasting damage to the distant, dispersed and well-defended Iranian facilities.

    The Israelis are also unlikely to go it alone as their most important foreign partner is engaged in diplomacy with Tehran.


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    5 Comments
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    10 years ago

    Bibi move over, you got placated by Obama and acting like a sour looser, the conflict is over.

    RebKlemson
    RebKlemson
    10 years ago

    world powers dont demand anything

    Sherree
    Sherree
    10 years ago

    The Fool is Obama, no not really the fools are the American people who voted him in for a second term. How quickly he forgets our OWN AMERICAN history, even though it is so recent we can still taste it. What about our own American hostages that Iran held for almost a year? How do those Americans feel about their president negotiating with these terrorists? Ask them if they can be believed and trusted. How about all the lies they told when they said they had no uranium and plutonium when the Israeli’s were telling the UN that they were stockpiling and building up for nuclear defense? Why does OUR president have his head up his ass?

    Conscience
    Conscience
    10 years ago

    Israel should really show now
    the power of restrain and restrain from not only adhering to the very fabric granting them the legitimacy of being entitled with the holiest place on earth , but also much much beyond that, which is to demonstrate to the entire world , how powerful they are , and to defy logic and reason and to show to all how it is, being committed to absence of roots and where it leads -to! Wow that is really strength and statesmanship: way to go isreal!