by Shlomo Cesana, Eli Leon, Yoni Hirsch, Dan Lavie, Israel Hayom Staff and News Agencies
Alongside lobbying Congress, Netanyahu to enlist Putin and Hollande to "negotiate a better deal" • Ya'alon: Iran needs to be faced with dilemma of choosing between a bomb or survival • Foxman: Kerry's moral preaching to Israelis was counterproductive.
"We can negotiate a better
deal," says Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
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Photo credit: AP |
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Israeli diplomatic officials
realize that a deal between the six world powers and Iran on curbing
Iran's controversial nuclear program is simply a matter of time, and
could even be signed as early as next week, when talks between the sides
resume in Geneva. The Prime Minister's Office is planning a diplomatic
blitz to ensure the agreement is as good as it can be from Israel's
perspective.
Alongside lobbying the U.S. Congress to
influence the White House, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu plans to
enlist Russian President Vladimir Putin and French President Francois
Hollande to "negotiate a better deal," as he put it. Next week, Hollande
is scheduled to visit Jerusalem before jetting off to Moscow to meet
with Putin.
Netanyahu seeks to change some of the
potential clauses in the deal that would enable Iran to become a nuclear
threshold state. So what would be a good deal? As far as Netanyahu is
concerned, it must include three basic stipulations: Suspension of all
uranium enrichment (which would mean all centrifuges must be
dismantled); removal of existing enriched material from Iran; and
decommissioning the plutonium production plant at Arak.
"Any deal that does not include these three
points that Netanyahu mentioned would be a bad deal. One that Netanyahu
would condemn," one official said Monday.
During a meeting with Belgian Foreign Minister
Didier Reynders this week, Netanyahu said that "the joint objective for
us, the U.S., Europe, China and Russia is to prevent Iran from
developing military nuclear capability. I think that now is the time to
improve the deal. Iran is in dire economic straits and we can negotiate a
better deal. Before easing the sanctions, we need to get a good deal,
not a bad deal."
Ya'alon: Israel has to yell
Speaking at the Jewish Federations of North
America General Assembly in Jerusalem on Monday, Defense Minister Moshe
(Bogie) Ya'alon said that "if we want to avoid the military option, we
have to make use of all the available tools, especially harsh sanctions,
and not let up. That is why Israel has to yell out, 'We are about to
miss our opportunity.' We believe that even now, the regime needs to be
faced with the dilemma of choosing between a bomb or survival. We are
not far from achieving that, with tough sanctions."
Meanwhile, the widening cracks in the
relationship between Israel and the U.S. have not yet healed. When
Netanyahu chooses to operate through the Kremlin, Congress and the
Elysee Palace rather than the White House to negotiate a better deal,
one can understand why U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro opted to
focus on the things that Israel and the U.S. have in common, telling the
GA on Monday that "there is no greater priority for the United States
and Israel than preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon."
"On this issue the United States and Israel
share an identical objective. [President Barack] Obama has made it
crystal clear that he will not permit Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon,
period, and is prepared to use all elements of our national power to
ensure that we are successful," he said.
Kerry demands patience
Also on Monday, U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry continued to insist that Netanyahu was criticizing the potential
deal without being really familiar with it. "The time to oppose it is
when you see what it is, not to oppose the effort to find out what is
possible,” Kerry said at a news conference after meeting with the crown
prince and foreign minister of the United Arab Emirates.
Addressing allegations that French
reservations had scuttled a deal between Iran and the West in Geneva
over the weekend, Kerry said that all the powers had been in agreement
on the deal, but the Iranian delegation had rejected it.
"The French signed off on it, we signed off on it," Kerry said. "There was unity but Iran couldn't take it."
Firing back, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad
Javad Zarif tweeted: "Mr. Secretary, was it Iran that gutted over half
of U.S. draft Thursday night? And publicly commented against it Friday
morning?"
Zarif also told an Iranian TV talk show that
the American's "conflicting statements" damaged confidence in the
process, adding that "considerable progress was made" in Geneva.
Meanwhile, French Foreign Minister Laurent
Fabius voiced hope on Monday that the six world powers and Iran would be
able reach an agreement. He stressed, however, that there were several
points that Iran still needed to work on before an agreement could be
signed.
Abraham Foxman, the National Director of the
Anti-Defamation League, who was visiting Israel for the ADL's 100th
anniversary, on Monday expressed criticism over the U.S. government
policy pertaining to Iran and called for additional sanctions on Iran.
"For better and for worse, Israel and the
United States are stuck with each other. Israel is the only stable
country in the region and the United States knows that. The United
States and Israel share the same goals: seeking stability, preventing
Iran from developing nuclear weapons, and make progress with the Israeli
Palestinian peace process," Foxman said in a statement.
"The strategy to get there is different; this
creates tension between the two states. Sometimes the strategy overtakes
the goals. Both countries need each other but don't trust each other.
At the same time, they also violate the pledge not to surprise each
other. Sadly, the United States is more guilty of this than Israel, for
example the recent leaking of information about Israel’s defensive
military actions in the area, i.e., Israeli military actions in Syria
and Sudan. In addition to all of this, Kerry's moral preaching to the
Israelis was counterproductive. Then came the surprise on the Geneva
agreement. Having seen some of the points in the tentative agreement
which is to be acted upon, Nov. 20 in Geneva, I'm very troubled. I am
convinced that it will not only unroll the sanctions protocol
prematurely, a strategy which has been so successful in bringing the
Iranians to the table but more seriously, it will legitimize Iran as a
threshold nuclear state.
Shlomo Cesana, Eli Leon, Yoni Hirsch, Dan Lavie, Israel Hayom Staff and News Agencies
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=13255
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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