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Israel's Iran nuke 'proof' bolsters Trump scrapping deal
By Francesco FONTEMAGGI
Washington (AFP) May 1, 2018

France says Iran nuclear deal strengthened by Netanyahu claims
Paris (AFP) May 1, 2018 - France said Tuesday that new claims about Iran's nuclear programme presented by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reinforced the importance of a 2015 deal that imposes controls on the Islamic republic.

In an elaborate televised presentation on Monday, the hawkish Israeli leader claimed he had new "proof" via captured documents that Iran had developed a nuclear weapons plan which could be activated at any time.

The French foreign ministry said the details needed to be "studied and evaluated" but a spokesperson added that the evidence appeared to confirm what European powers had known for more than a decade and half.

"At first sight, they (the details) confirm that part of the Iranian nuclear programme, as France and its partners stated during the first revelations in the summer of 2002, was not civilian," said the spokesperson in a statement received by AFP.

The 2015 nuclear deal negotiated between Iran and six world powers imposes nuclear inspections on Iran in return for the loosening of economic sanctions, but US President Donald Trump is threatening to pull out.

"The pertinence of the deal is reinforced by the details presented by Israel: all activity linked to the development of a nuclear weapon is permanently forbidden by the deal," said the foreign ministry spokesperson.

"The inspection regime put in place by the (UN nuclear watchdog) IAEA thanks to the deal is one of the most exhaustive and the most robust in the history of nuclear non-proliferation," the statement added.

French President Emmanuel Macron has urged Trump to stick with the nuclear accord, arguing that it presents the only viable option available to the international community.

Besides agreeing to snap inspections Iran also cut the number of centrifuges used for enriching uranium and reduced its stockpiles of the material.

The Israeli premier has repeatedly called for the deal -- which Iran signed with Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States -- to be either altered or scrapped.

Netanyahu did not present evidence on Monday that Iran had actively worked to obtain an atomic weapon since the 2015 agreement and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) considers the country to be complying.

Trump is set to make announcement on May 12.

Israel's "proof" of an Iranian nuclear weapons plan that could be activated at any time has divided experts and comes as President Donald Trump weighs the fate of the historic 2015 nuclear agreement with Tehran.

Here is a look at what's at stake and how Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's speech on Monday could influence events.

- Are these documents truly new? -

Netanyahu unveiled what he said were tens of thousands of documents taken by spies.

He said the documents detail an alleged project that Iran was forced to shelve in 2003, but kept ready to put into action at any time.

Experts were divided over the implications.

Those who support the 2015 Iranian nuclear pact said the documents show nothing new and highlight the deal's importance, while those opposed said it should bolster Trump's resolve to pull out.

"Netanyahu claimed that Israel has acquired new information proving that Iran lied about it's nuclear weapons program, prior to 2003. We already knew this -- this is not new news," said the Diplomacy Works think tank, created by former secretary of state John Kerry, who oversaw the 2015 deal.

"This is precisely why America and other world powers -- UK, Germany, France, Russia and China -- negotiated an arms agreement ... to ensure that if Iran decides to lie ever again, an intrusive inspection regime would be in place."

Ali Vaez, from the International Crisis Group, said Netanyahu's move was an "attempt at recycling old info to create new hype and push" to convince Trump to pull the plug on the Iran deal and provoke a military conflict.

But the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington think tank that is hawkish on Iran and opposes the 2015 deal, welcomed Israel's claim.

"The documents are absolutely new," FDD senior advisor Richard Goldberg told AFP.

"Iran is on a slow-walk to a nuclear weapon under cover of a flawed deal."

- What do signatories to the deal think? -

Trump welcomed Netanyahu's presentation, as did his new Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who met with the Israeli leader on Sunday in Tel Aviv.

Pompeo, until last week director of the CIA, called the intelligence trove authentic and said much of it was new to US experts.

Trump reiterated his aversion to the "horrible" deal, highlighting provisions in the agreement restricting Iran's nuclear activities that begin expiring in 2025.

Without commenting on the files themselves, the Europeans have tried to underscore the rationale for making the 2015 deal in the first place -- that Iran cannot be trusted and needs inspections.

"All the agreement is based on the assumption that they may lie! That's the reason of the monitoring mechanism. Cheaters are a risk you take into account in any negotiation," French ambassador to the United States Gerard Araud said on Twitter.

"The system of controls proves that we do not trust anyone."

- What next? -

Israel's announcement appears calibrated for maximum impact on Trump in the run-up to the May 12 deadline he has given the Europeans to find ways to toughen the 2015 deal.

Without these assurances, Trump has signalled he will re-impose sanctions on Iran that had been lifted as part of the pact.

For many observers, Israel, which feels directly threatened by a potentially nuclear Iran, is trying to influence negotiations and derail European efforts to save the agreement.

As Netanyahu presented photographs and graphics on a large screen, it was clear he was addressing Trump more than anyone, Vaez said.

"He had an audience of one tonight: the man who gets his intel briefing from TV theatrics (@POTUS)," he wrote on Twitter.

- What will Trump do? -

The US adminstration says it has not yet decided. But Washington's support for Israel seems to support the likelihood of a US withdrawal from the deal.

In a statement about Netanyahu's speech, the White House underscored the US policy that "Iran must never have nuclear weapons."

"These facts are consistent with what the United States has long known: Iran had a robust, clandestine nuclear weapons program that it has tried and failed to hide from the world and from its own people," it said.

Supporters of the deal seem resigned to Trump pulling out.

"I'm convinced Trump will withdraw from the deal. I think it's a mistake, but I can't stop it," Dan Shapiro, the US ambassador to Israel under Barack Obama, wrote on Twitter.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who met with Trump last week, is also pessimistic on the deal.

"I listen to what President Trump is saying and it seems to me that he is not very eager to defend it," Macron said after his visit to the White House.


Related Links
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
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Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com


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NUKEWARS
Pompeo talks tough on Iran in first trip to Mideast allies
Tel Aviv (AFP) April 29, 2018
Washington's new chief diplomat lashed out at Iran on Sunday as he met Saudi leaders and landed in Israel to rally opposition to Tehran and brief US allies on President Donald Trump's threat to quit the Iran nuclear deal. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who set off on his first diplomatic trip within hours of being sworn in, met on Sunday with Saudi King Salman in Riyadh, after dinner on Saturday with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Pompeo flew on to Tel Aviv to meet Israeli Prime Minister Ben ... read more

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