by Shlomo Cesana, Yoni Hirsch, David Baron, Israel Hayom Staff and News Agencies
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: The correct approach to take toward the Iranian regime is to be wary and increase the pressure • On NBC's "Meet the Press," Netanyahu calls for full dismantlement of Iran's nuclear program.
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu appears on NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday
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Photo credit: Screenshot / NBC |
Iran has increased its number of centrifuges by over a hundredfold since 2006, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday.
"Last week saw the start of an additional
round of talks between the major powers and Iran," Netanyahu said at
Sunday's cabinet meeting. "We must not forget that the Iranian regime
has systematically misled the international community. In 2006, Iran had
167 centrifuges. Today, despite all the bans and all the promises, they
have over 18,000 centrifuges, i.e., the number of centrifuges has
increased over a hundredfold during the talks in which they have been
called upon to halt the production of centrifuges related to
enrichment."
"Despite strong U.N. Security Council
decisions that bar them from this enrichment process and from producing
centrifuges -- they are continuing," Netanyahu said. "I think that in
this situation as long as we do not see actions instead of words, the
international pressure must continue to be applied and even increased."
"The greater the pressure, the greater the
chance that there will be a genuine dismantling of the Iranian military
nuclear program," Netanyahu said. "If the pressure is reduced, the
chance will be accordingly smaller. I would also like to reiterate that
there is a danger of granting international legitimacy to a recalcitrant
regime that is now participating in the mass slaughter of civilians --
men, women and children -- in Syria and has done so over the past two
years, a regime that is currently continuing a constant campaign of
terrorism on five continents, a regime that calls for the destruction of
Israel and which ignores and grossly violates the decisions of the U.N.
Security Council on the nuclear issue."
"I think that the correct approach toward such a regime is to be wary and increase the pressure," Netanyahu concluded.
In an interview that aired on NBC's "Meet the
Press" later in the day, Netanyahu called for the full dismantlement of
Iran's nuclear program.
"I think the pressure has to be maintained on
Iran, even increased on Iran, until it actually stops the nuclear
program, that is, dismantles it," Netanyahu said.
Netanyahu warned that "any partial deal could
end up dissolving the sanctions," as many countries are "just waiting
for a signal to get rid of their sanctions" on Iran.
Netanyahu compared the situation in Iran to
that in Syria, saying if Syria offered to get rid of only 20 percent of
its chemical weapons in exchange for the easing of sanctions, "nobody
would buy that."
"That's exactly what Iran is trying to do,"
Netanyahu said. "They're trying to give a partial deal that they know
could end up dissolving the sanctions ... and would keep them with the
nuclear weapons capabilities."
A senior Israeli diplomatic source said on
Sunday that Israel is working with the six world powers negotiating with
Iran, especially the United States, in a bid to prevent the easing of
sanctions. As part of this effort, Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval
Steinitz is visiting Washington this week.
Netanyahu is scheduled to travel on Tuesday to
Rome, where he will meet with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry. AFP
reported on Sunday that, contrary to previous media reports, a meeting
would not be held between Netanyahu and Pope Francis. Netanyahu's office
did not comment on the report.
Meanwhile, Iranian President Hasan Rouhani on
Sunday accused Israel of trying to sabotage the talks between Iran and
world powers.
"Zionists were resorting to sabotage and
trouble-making inside or outside the country whenever Iran was achieving
a success," Rouhani was quoted as saying by the official IRNA news
agency.
The speaker of Iran's parliament, Ali
Larijani, said on Sunday that Iranian lawmakers could call for
stepped-up nuclear work if world powers press too hard for concessions
in the ongoing nuclear talks.
Larijani said that the Iranian parliament
would not permit world powers to impose "special measures" on the
country beyond the obligations laid out by the U.N. treaty overseeing
nuclear activity, such as U.N. monitoring and inspection.
Details from last week's talks remain tightly
guarded, but short-range priorities have been made clear. The U.S. and
allies seek to roll back Iran's uranium enrichment, while Iran wants to
see international sanctions eased.
The next round for talks is scheduled in
Geneva for Nov. 7-8 between Iran and the groups of six world powers,
which include the five permanent U.N. Security Council members and
Germany.
The semiofficial Fars news agency quoted
Larijani as saying that Iran's nuclear program cannot be pushed beyond
the requirements of the U.N.'s Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which
Iran has signed.
"Iranian negotiators should be fully aware of
this," Larijani said. "If parliament feels another powerful party has a
double-standard and unjustifiable attitudes, it will approve necessary
measures on amount and diversity of nuclear activities."
Larijani did not elaborate, but said there is "no room for trust" yet with the U.S.
Abbas Araghchi, Iran's deputy foreign minister and one
of its nuclear negotiators, also told a parliamentary committee that
"Iran has not admitted any commitment" in the Geneva talks, the
semiofficial Iranian Students' News Agency reported Sunday. He told
state television Saturday that the U.S. holds a "main part of the
responsibility in the confidence-building process" in the talks.
Shlomo Cesana, Yoni Hirsch, David Baron, Israel Hayom Staff and News Agencies
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=12717
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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