Israel Warns against Nuclear Compromise with Iran

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Israel on Tuesday urged the world to avoid a partial deal with Iran which could see a relaxing of sanctions, as a new round of nuclear talks were launched in Geneva.

The security cabinet warned the international community against any "partial agreement that would fail to bring about the full dismantling of the Iranian military nuclear program...(which) could lead to the collapse of the sanctions regime."

Iran began two days of closed-door negotiations in Geneva on Tuesday with the P5+1 countries -- the United States, Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany, ending a six-month hiatus.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has launched a media blitz in recent days, warning against concessions to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

Rouhani's conciliatory tone has raised hopes of a breakthrough in the decade-long dispute over Tehran's nuclear program.

The security cabinet statement called on world powers to be wary of Iran at negotiations.

"Iran believes it can get by with cosmetic concessions that would not significantly impede its path to developing nuclear weapons, concessions that could be reversed in weeks," the statement said.

"In exchange, Iran demands an easing of the sanctions, which have taken years to put in place."

The security cabinet said the P5+1 should "reject Iran's attempts to reach a deal that would leave it with the capability to develop nuclear weapons."

An Israeli official told Agence France Presse that the seven-member ministerial committee had met on Monday night but released the statement Tuesday morning to coincide with the talks.

Israel, it said, did not oppose Iran having a peaceful nuclear energy program -- one which would not require uranium enrichment or plutonium production, it said.

"Iran claims that it supposedly has the 'right to enrich.' But a country that regularly deceives the international community, that violates U.N. Security Council resolutions ... has no such right," it said.

Later in the day, Netanyahu stressed that "now" was "an opportune moment to reach a genuine diplomatic solution that peacefully ends Iran's military nuclear program."

Speaking ahead of a meeting with Malta Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, Netanyahu said that pressure in the form of sanctions is what brought Iran back to the negotiating table.

"And it is that pressure which makes the peaceful dismantling of Iran's military nuclear program possible," Netanyahu said in remarks relayed by his office.

The Geneva talks are aimed at reaching accord over Iran's nuclear program, which Israel and the West say is aimed at developing an atomic bomb and Tehran says is for peaceful purposes only.

The Islamic republic has been slapped with several rounds of sanctions because of its nuclear program.

Israel, the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear-armed power, wants Iran to meet four conditions before the sanctions are eased: halting all uranium enrichment; removing all enriched uranium from its territory; closing its underground nuclear facility in Qom; and halting construction of a plutonium reactor.

Israel has refused to rule out military strikes against Iran, with Netanyahu telling the U.N. General Assembly this month that the Jewish state would act unilaterally if necessary.

Comments 2
Thumb mckinl 15 October 2013, 13:49

No one believes Bibi anymore. Not half the seats were filled in his last address at the UN. He decries Iran while running his Apartheid regime that has many dozens of nuclear bombs. Bibi's entire political career has been about taking all of Palestine for Zionists.

And we've heard the same story from Bibi for years because Israel needs to say it has external enemies to cover up its' nuclear program and the ongoing "crimes against humanity" committed daily against Palestinians in the West Bank, Gaza and the Negev.

Missing VINCENT 15 October 2013, 20:46

All nukes, whoever have them and wherever they, must be accounted for and dismantled. I hope you guys are correct, and Iran is not pursuing them. Nobody has the right to live here on Earth. It is a privilege, and I certainly don't want to give those who have no right to breath our air the capability to kill thousands with weapons of mass destruction.