Tuesday, 14 July 2015

‘Historic Mistake’ - Netanyahu blasts Iran nuclear deal

 ‘Historic Mistake’ - Netanyahu blasts Iran nuclear deal
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday the agreement between Iran and six world powers on Tehran’s nuclear program is a “historic mistake for the world.”

“Wide-ranging concessions were made in all of the areas which should have prevented Iran from getting the ability to arm itself with a nuclear weapon,’’ Mr. Netanyahu said. “The desire to sign an agreement was stronger than everything else.”

The Israeli leader’s criticism of the accord reflects his long-standing opposition to the talks and his view that the deal will leave Iran with ability to build a weapon within weeks.

In comments to reporters before talks with Dutch Foreign Minister Bert Koenders in Jerusalem, Mr. Netanyahu also warned that lifting economic sanctions on Iran will give Tehran “hundreds of billions of dollars” to boost support its allies in the Middle East that are also Israel’s enemies.

“From the initial reports received, it is already possible to say that this agreement is a historic mistake for the world,” Mr. Netanyahu said.

Mr. Netanyahu’s public attacks against the Obama administration over its negotiations with Iran—most notably before a joint session of U.S. Congress last March—has frayed U.S.-Israeli ties. Although most Israeli politicians share his skepticism about the agreement, the Israeli premier has been criticized by opposition politicians for his confrontational approach toward the U.S.
Israel is expected to actively lobby U.S. legislators against the deal. Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely pointed to such an effort in her reaction to the deal.

“The implications of this agreement for the foreseeable future are very grave,” she said. “The state of Israel will employ all diplomatic means to prevent the confirmation of the agreement.’’
Speaking to Israel Radio on Tuesday, Mr. Netanyahu’s former national security adviser,Yaakov Amidror, said Tuesday’s agreement lacks tough procedures that prevent Iran from violating it.

“When the foundations of a house are shaky,” Mr. Amidror said. “I don’t care what’s in the windows or doors. That house won’t stand through one storm. This agreement won’t stand through one storm. On the day the Iranians decide to violate it, there is no real mechanism that can operate against them.”
-Wall Street Journal

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