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NUKEWARS
EU gears up for Iran sanctions relief despite Israel concern
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Nov 25, 2013


EU envoy seeks to placate Israel on Iran deal
Jerusalem (AFP) Nov 25, 2013 - The EU ambassador-designate to Israel, Lars Faaborg-Andersen, on Monday sought to reassure the Israelis over a nuclear deal struck with Iran.

Iran agreed to curb its nuclear programme for the next six months in exchange for limited sanctions relief following marathon talks with the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany in Geneva that ended Sunday.

But Israel slammed the deal as an "historic mistake," having urged for months to keep up sanctions pressure.

"We very much have Israel's security at heart," Faaborg-Andersen told a meeting of EU ambassadors with Israeli Intelligence Minister Yuval Steinitz in Jerusalem.

Faaborg-Andersen condemned "inflammatory statements (on Israel) coming out of Iran," saying it was "only natural that Israel wants to weigh in on these important negotiations that have been conducted with Iran."

But he hailed the deal as the "first time in 10 years" at which Iran's nuclear programme had been significantly curbed.

Steinitz, for his part, told the envoys "we are not satisfied, to say the least," with the deal.

"Actually, we're quite disappointed with the agreement that was signed yesterday."

The deal will see Iran cut down its uranium enrichment, but Steinitz said there must be a complete halt.

"Our main concern is that Iran will remain, according to this agreement, a threshold nuclear country, which means countries that can produce nuclear weapons in less than a year."

Saudi Arabia cautiously welcomes Iran nuclear deal
Riyadh (AFP) Nov 25, 2013 - Saudi Arabia cautiously welcomed on Monday a nuclear deal reached between Iran and world powers, saying "good intentions" could lead to a comprehensive agreement on Tehran's controversial atomic programme.

"This agreement could be a first step towards a comprehensive solution for Iran's nuclear programme, if there are good intentions," the government said in a statement.

The landmark deal reached Sunday would curb parts of Iran's nuclear programme in return for some relief from international sanctions.

Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia has been locked in a decades-long rivalry with Shiite-dominated Iran.

The government said a comprehensive solution should lead to the "removal of all weapons of mass destruction, especially nuclear, from the Middle East and the Gulf".

Such a solution should be followed by "important steps" that would guarantee the right of all states in the region to use nuclear power for peaceful purposes, it added, the SPA state news agency reported.

The deal was reached following marathon talks in Geneva between Iran and the so-called P5+1 nations comprising Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States.

The West and Israel suspect Iran is pursuing a nuclear weapons capability alongside its uranium enrichment programme, which Tehran insists is entirely for peaceful purposes.

Saudi newspapers were sceptical of Iran's commitment to implement the deal.

Al-Riyadh daily charged in its editorial that the agreement was aimed at getting Gulf countries "stripped naked in face of Iran's growing nuclear power, and its scary ambitions".

"This could lead to alienation between Europe and the United States (on one side) and Gulf countries (on the other)," it said.

"Did Washington betray its Gulf allies?" asked Al-Eqtisadiah daily.

Other Gulf monarchies welcomed the agreement.

Qatar said the deal "marks an important step on the road to peace and stability in the region," while calling for a Middle East void of nuclear weapons.

Bahrain also hailed the agreement, saying diplomatic solutions were the "best means" to guarantee stability, while Oman and Kuwait expressed hopes the agreement would ease tensions and lead to peace and stability.

The European Union could lift some sanctions on Iran next month, France said Monday, as world powers geared up to implement a landmark nuclear deal with Tehran while trying to placate a furious Israel.

Iran and the major powers have hailed Sunday's deal in Geneva under which Tehran agreed to curb a nuclear programme the West suspects aims to develop an atomic bomb, in return for an easing of crippling sanctions.

But Iran's arch-foe Israel -- an ally of many of the six countries who negotiated the accord, including France and the United States -- blasted the accord as a "historic mistake". It reserved the right to defend itself against any threats made by Tehran.

In a radio interview, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said EU foreign ministers were to meet next month to discuss lifting some sanctions as part of the deal, a move he said could take place "in December".

But a spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton sought to dampen expectations that a firm decision would be taken at the next foreign ministers' gathering due on December 16.

"It could be in December, it could be in January, it depends on how long the process takes," he said.

One senior Western diplomat, who refused to be named, told AFP the focus in the coming weeks would be "swift implementation".

Concerned, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday decided to send his national security advisor to Washington for talks on Iran after warning the deal will convince Tehran it has a free hand to achieve a breakout nuclear capability.

US President Barack Obama has tried to reassure Netanyahu, calling him on Sunday to discuss the issue.

Fabius on Monday also sought to placate Israel about the agreement with Iran, whose supreme leader last week described the Jewish state as a "rabid dog" that was "doomed to collapse".

Tehran has a long history of belligerent statements towards the Jewish state, and Israel -- the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear power -- has repeatedly warned that a nuclear Iran would pose an existential threat.

"We will work so that the security of all the countries in the region, including Israel, is better assured," Fabius said.

Asked about the risk of Israeli strikes on Iran, he responded that he thought such as move was unlikely "because no one would understand it" at this point in time.

'Israel's security at heart'

Speaking in Jerusalem, the EU ambassador-designate to Israel, Lars Faaborg-Andersen, echoed Fabius's comments, telling a crowd of diplomats and the country's intelligence minister that the 28-member bloc had "Israel's security at heart".

The so-called P5+1 world powers that negotiated the accord with Iran -- the United States, France, Britain, Russia, China and Germany -- say it is a key first step that wards off the threat of military escalation in the volatile Middle East.

Under the deal, which lasts for six months while a more long-lasting solution is negotiated, Tehran will limit uranium enrichment to low levels used only for civilian energy purposes.

It will also neutralise its existing stockpile of uranium enriched to 20 percent, which is close to weapons-grade and therefore an area of top concern.

In return, the Islamic state will get some $7 billion (five billion euros) in sanctions relief in access to frozen funds and in its petrochemical, gold and precious metals and auto sectors.

But the raft of international sanctions that have hobbled the Iranian economy remain untouched.

Fabius said that Iran committed "to giving up the prospect of a nuclear weapon" as part of the interim deal.

"As much as Iran can move forward where civilian nuclear energy is concerned, it cannot do so for the atomic weapon," he added.

But these pacifying moves have failed to convince many Israelis, and a poll conducted by the daily Israel Hayom found more than three-quarters of Israeli Jews believe Iran will keep up its nuclear drive despite the Geneva deal.

Most Iranian newspapers on Monday hailed the Geneva deal, attributing the relatively swift success to Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.

Zarif, who led the Iranian delegation at the talks, received a hero's welcome when he returned home and insisted Monday that the "structure of Iran's nuclear programme was preserved."

And Saudi Arabia, which has been locked in a decades-long rivalry with Iran, also cautiously welcomed the deal, saying "good intentions" could lead to a larger, comprehensive solution.

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