by Ariel Kahana and Eldad Beck
After International Atomic Energy Agency issues laconic statement on secret Iranian nuclear site near capital, PM Netanyahu fires back, warning time may be running out
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the U.N. General
Assembly last week
Photo: Reuters
Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu lambasted the International Atomic Energy Agency on
Tuesday, hours after it issued a laconic statement dismissing his claim of a secret nuclear installation in Iran.
Netanyahu said the agency, which has been
tasked by the United Nations with verifying Iran's nuclear compliance,
"must inspect the site immediately," before it is too late.
Addressing the U.N. General Assembly last week, Netanyahu presented world leaders with evidence that Iran was storing nuclear-related material in violation of the 2015 deal
with world powers. The undeclared site is located in Turouzabad, just
outside the capital Tehran, and could potentially store up to 300 tons
of material and equipment.
Netanyahu even held up a prop with the
coordinates and an image of the installation, and later tweeted what
appeared to be a satellite image of the site.
"The IAEA relates to inspections that it
has carried out in various places in Iran but it does not relate to the
specific site in Turouzabad which Prime Minister Netanyahu referred to
in his U.N. speech," Netanyahu's office said in a statement on Tuesday.
"There is no reason to wait. The IAEA must
inspect the site and immediately dispatch monitors with Geiger counters
and the prime minister's words will be seen as verifiably true."
In its statement on Tuesday, the IAEA
insisted it had visited "all the sites and locations in Iran which it
needed to visit," but did not give a specific time or date when the site
in Turouzabad may have been inspected.
"The agency sends inspectors to sites and
locations only when needed. The agency uses all safeguards relevant to
information available to it but it does not take any information at face
value," the statement quoted IAEA chief Yukiya Amano as saying.
"In order to maintain credibility, the
agency's independence in relation to the implementation of verification
activities is of paramount importance," he said.
A senior Western diplomat told Israel Hayom
that the European Union would fail to salvage the 2015 nuclear deal
with Iran, despite efforts to bypass U.S. sanctions.
In recent weeks, senior European officials,
including EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini, have introduced
measures aimed at enabling companies in the 28-member bloc to trade with
Iran without being blacklisted by the U.S. Treasury. This includes
various banking schemes and legal maneuvers.
But the Western diplomat told Israel Hayom
that "there is zero chance that EU companies will continue trading with
Iran, as the EU has virtually no viable option to protect companies from
the U.S."
He said it was "hard to believe that a
company would want to take the risk of being targeted by U.S.
authorities just for the sake of trading with a small and fragile
economy such as Iran's. In the cost-benefit analysis, it is just not
worth it. Prime Minister Netanyahu is right and the nuclear deal is
essentially dead."
Ariel Kahana and Eldad Beck
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2018/10/03/netanyahu-urges-iaea-to-send-inspectors-to-iran-immediately/
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