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Sunday 5 April 2015

Netanyahu continues attack on Iran nuclear agreement: it's 'a very bad deal'


  • Israel PM: deal did not do enough to dismantle nuclear infrastructure
    Energy secretary Moniz: ‘We have a very, very different view of the facts’



‘A better deal would roll back Iran’s vast nuclear infrastructure, and require Iran to stop its aggression in the region, its terror worldwide and its calls and actions to annihilate the state of Israel.

Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu on Sunday stepped up his attack on a nascent deal to curb Iran’s nuclear program, calling the framework agreement announced in Switzerland last week “a very bad deal”.

The framework did not do enough to dismantle Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, Netanyahu said, and world powers were making a mistake by offering Iran a path to sanctions relief without demanding more in return.

“A better deal would roll back Iran’s vast nuclear infrastructure, and require Iran to stop its aggression in the region, its terror worldwide and its calls and actions to annihilate the state of Israel,” Netanyahu said on CNN. “That’s a better deal. It’s achievable.”

Netanyahu has been a critic of the negotiations with Iran from the outset, but the announcement of a framework agreement has set off a new round of lobbying against the negotiations by the Israeli leader, who was scheduled to appear on three Sunday morning news shows in the US. Netanyahu was apparently working from a new set of talking points drafted by advisers over the weekend to attack the deal, the Associated Press reported.

The Israeli leader said the deal should have included a provision to curtail Iranian efforts to develop an international ballistic missile. “Those missiles are only used for you,” Netanyahu said, referring to the US. “No one is asking Iran in this deal to stop its aggression in the region.”

US energy secretary Ernest Moniz, who negotiated the technical side of the deal, said Netanyahu’s assessment was wrong.

“We certainly have a very, very different view of the facts,” Moniz said on CBS News. “Certainly today, the breakout time [for Iran to acquire a weapon] is about two months. This will immediately get us over a year. It will get us there with almost instantaneous recognition of any attempt to evade the deal, and it will give us plenty of time to respond diplomatically or otherwise.”

“If they fail to meet any of these requirements, we are immediately going to know.”

Moniz said compliance could be assured because of “unprecedented access and transparency” for inspectors. “We’ll have continuous surveillance of centrifuge production,” he said.

Netanyahu was also sharply rebuked by Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, the long-time head of the intelligence committee who followed the Israeli leader on CNN and warned that he was intervening at the wrong time.

“I don’t think it’s helpful for Israel to come out and oppose this one opportunity to change a major dynamic, which is downhill, a downhill dynamic in this part of the world,” Feinstein said.

“To be candid with you, this can backfire on him,” Feinstein warned, going on to criticize an appearance by Netanyahu before the US Congress early last month. “I wish that he would contain himself. Because he has put out no real alternative in his speech to Congress, no real alternative. Since then, no real alternative.”

Netanyahu denied that he was acting out of personal spite against President Barack Obama, with whom he has had a strained relationship, especially as the Iran negotiations have coalesced.

“I think it’s not a question of personal trust,” Netanyahu said. “I always respect the presidency of the United States, and also this president of the United States.”

The two leaders spoke for about an hour after the announcement last week of the framework deal.

Netanyahu said he had continued to talk with American legislators in an effort to build opposition to the Iran deal. “I’ve talked to about two-thirds of the House of Representatives, and probably about an equal number of senators,” he said. Legislation in both houses threatens the deal by setting restrictions on the timeline for rolling back sanctions and other rules.

Feinstein said she would likely vote against such legislation sponsored by Senator Bob Corker, chairman of the intelligence committee. “Having watched this for a long time, I think it’s the best that’s going to get done,” Feinstein said of the initial agreement with Iran.

“A couple of years now have gone in to get this far. It’s a better agreement than I thought it was ever going to be.”

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