by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu presents diagram depicting Israel's red line regarding Iranian
nuclear progress during address at the General Assembly on Thursday.
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Photo credit: AFP |
U.S. officials reiterated Thursday the Obama
administration's disagreement with Israel over the need to draw red
lines for Iran to stop its nuclear program, just hours after Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu implored world leaders at the U.N. to
prevent Iran from reaching the final stage of uranium enrichment.
Amid still-simmering tensions between
Washington and Jerusalem, U.S. officials underscored Netanyahu's
non-confrontational tone toward U.S. President Barack Obama, and his
expression of gratitude for the president's warning to Tehran on
Tuesday. But the officials privately made clear that Washington remains
opposed to Netanyahu's push for Obama to set a red line that Tehran must
not cross if it is to avoid military action.
The White House also released a statement
Thursday highlighting the shared interest Israel and the U.S. have in
denying Iran a nuclear weapon and their close consultations on the
matter. But the White House stopped short of saying Obama would give any
ground on his resistance to setting a red line on Iran's nuclear
program.
"As the prime minister said, the United States
and Israel share the goal of preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear
weapon," National Security Council spokesperson Tommy Vietor said. "The
president made that clear to the world in his United Nations General
Assembly speech this week. We will continue our close consultation and
cooperation toward achieving that goal."
Earlier Thursday, in his speech to world
leaders at the U.N. General Assembly, Netanyahu once again called on the
international community to stop Iran's nuclear program before it
becomes too late. Netanyahu held up a diagram of a nuclear bomb showing
the uranium enrichment thresholds that Iran is allegedly trying to
cross. "Now they are well into the second stage. By next spring, at most
by next summer at current enrichment rates, they will have finished the
medium enrichment and move on to the final stage," Netanyahu warned.
"From there, it's only a few months, possibly a few weeks before they
get enough enriched uranium for the first bomb." The Israeli premier
proceeded to draw a red line on the diagram marking the final stage,
where Iran would reach 90 percent enrichment, saying Iran must not be
allow to reach that level. Experts believe that Iran would have enough
uranium at that point to quickly produce an atomic bomb.
Obama has not set an ultimatum nor a clear red
line against Iran, despite public urging from Netanyahu over the past
several weeks which has aggravated strains between the two leaders.
Obama, seeking re-election on Nov. 6, opted not to meet Netanyahu on the
latter's U.S. visit, which was widely seen in Israel as a snub. But the
White House said the two leaders would speak by phone, likely on
Friday. Obama was on Air Force One, returning from a campaign rally in
Virginia, at the time of Netanyahu's U.N. appearance, and a White House
aide said the president did not have a chance to watch the speech.
By referring to a spring or summer 2013 time
frame for Iran to complete the next stage of uranium enrichment, the
Israeli leader also seemed to dispel, at least for now, fears that
Israel might strike Iran before the U.S. presidential election, now 40
days away. Netanyahu's speech sounded a relatively conciliatory note
with respect to the ongoing disagreement with the U.S., and Obama for
his tough stance on Iran. "I very much appreciate the president's
position, as does everyone in my country. We share the goal of stopping
Iran's nuclear weapons program," Netanyahu said in his address on
Thursday. "Israel is [engaged] in discussions with the United States
over this issue, and I am confident we can chart a path forward
together," he said.
Netanyahu told the U.N. he believes that faced
with a clear red line, Iran would back down in a crisis that has sent
jitters across the region and across financial markets. "And this will
give more time for sanctions and diplomacy to convince Iran to dismantle
its nuclear weapons program altogether," said the prime minister, who
later met with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for 75 minutes.
Netanyahu's remarks were the closest he or any
top Israeli official has come to publicly laying out precisely which
Iranian actions could trigger an Israeli military strike on Tehran's
nuclear infrastructure. In his speech, Netanyahu never explicitly said
that if Iran crossed his red line, Israel would launch attacks against
Iranian nuclear facilities, but he did seem to imply such a threat.
Iran, Netanyahu said, was well into what he
defined as the second stage of enrichment — 20% purification — and
predicted it would complete that stage by "next spring, at most by next
summer, at current enrichment rates."
According to an August report by the
International Atomic Energy Agency., Iran has stockpiled 91.4 kilograms
(201.5 pounds) of the 20% material.
Some experts say Iran would need 200 to 250
kilograms (440 to 550 pounds) of such material for a weapon. Other
experts suggest less might do it. Iran could potentially reach that
threshold soon by producing roughly 15 kilograms (33 pounds) a month, a
rate that could be speeded up if it activates new enrichment
centrifuges.
According to the U.N. nuclear watchdog, around
25 kilograms (55.1 pounds) of uranium enriched to a 90% purity level
would be needed for a single nuclear weapon.
Iran's U.N. mission, responding to Netanyahu's
speech, accused him of making "baseless and absurd allegations" and
said the Islamic republic "reserves its full right to retaliate with
full force against any attack."
Iran called Netanyahu's visual tool "an
unfounded and imaginary graph ... used to justify a threat against a
founding Member of the United Nations."
Netanyahu's remarks also seemed to deliver a
two-part message to the Obama White House — along with Iran's leaders,
his most important audience — signaling that the prime minister wanted
an end to the all-too-public war of words with Washington over Iran's
suspected nuclear ambitions.
But they also showed he was not backing down from his insistence that harsher warnings must be delivered to Tehran.
In his own speech to the General Assembly on
Tuesday, Obama said the United States will "do what we must" to prevent
Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and that time is not unlimited for
diplomacy to resolve the issue.
Britain, France, Germany, the United States,
Russia and China have negotiated with Iran without success in one form
or another for nearly 10 years to persuade it to halt its nuclear
program in exchange for political and economic incentives.
Addressing the General Assembly on Thursday,
Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said disagreement over Iran's
nuclear program had reached "a new, crucial stage," and urged a
diplomatic solution.
The six nations, whose foreign ministers met
at the United Nations on Thursday, have held three rounds of talks with
Iran this year without visible progress. A U.S. official voiced hope for
a fourth round "in the not-too-distant future."
As if to highlight Netanyahu's concerns that
tougher U.N. sanctions against Iran are unlikely due to Russian and
Chinese resistance, the group failed to agree on any plan for further
steps against Tehran, envoys said.
Seeking re-election, Obama has faced criticism
from Republican challenger former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney
that the president is being too tough with Israel and not tough enough
with Iran.
Netanyahu spoke a day after Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad addressed the General Assembly.
Ahmadinejad said on Monday he did not take
seriously the threat that Israel could launch a military strike on
Iran's nuclear facilities. He also said Israel has no roots in the
Middle East and would be "eliminated."
Netanyahu has faced opposition within his
cabinet and from former Israeli security chiefs to any go-it-alone
attack on Iran. Opinion polls show Israelis are wary of any such strike
by their military, whose capability of destroying underground Iranian
facilities is limited.
Israel, believed to have the Middle East's
only atomic arsenal, sees a nuclear-armed Iran as a threat to its
existence and has expressed frustration over the failure of diplomacy
and sanctions to rein in Tehran's nuclear activity.
Iran says it is enriching uranium only for peaceful energy and medical purposes, not for nuclear bombs.
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=5932
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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