by Israel Hayom Staff
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tells cabinet that following meetings with leaders of Germany, France and Britain, he feels that they "understood and accepted" that Israel would take aggressive action to counter all threats or attacks.
Britain's Prime
Minister Theresa May greets Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu in London,
Wednesday
Photo: AP
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his cabinet Sunday that his recent
trip to Europe last week had resulted in "broad international agreement"
that Iranian forces must withdraw from Syria.
Addressing the weekly cabinet meeting,
Netanyahu said that in his meetings last week with three key world
leaders – German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel
Macron and British Prime Minister Theresa May – he chose to focus on
Iranian aggression in the region in general but first and foremost on
Iran's attempts to gain a military foothold in Syria.
"These leaders agree with my main
objective, which is to put together broad international consensus that
Iran must withdraw from Syria – all of Syria," Netanyahu said.
"That was the purpose of the trip, and to a large extent, it was achieved," he said.
"I know that ridding Syria of Iran's
presence will be a long process, but I believe that if you set a goal
and you know where you're headed, you have a good chance of getting
there," Netanyahu told his cabinet.
"At any rate, I made it clear that we will
take aggressive action against attempts to established security threats
[in Syria], and of course against any attack on us," he continued. "I
think that this is understandable and accepted by these leaders."
Speaking with May on Tuesday, Netanyahu
said he had two goals: "The first is to make sure that Iran does not
have nuclear weapons. And the second is specifically in Syria."
Netanyahu told May he was certain that Israel and Britain could find "ways to work together" to achieve both those goals.
In a joint statement following his meeting
with Macron, Netanyahu said that he saw "nuclear weapons in the hands of
a radical Islamic regime like Tehran" as the "greatest threat to the
world today."
Netanyahu said that Iran withdrawing from
Syria was a "prerequisite" for Syria's rehabilitation and for its
prosperity, and even for stability in the Middle East as a whole.
Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2018/06/10/pm-says-secured-broad-agreement-iran-must-quit-syria/
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