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NUKEWARS
Netanyahu convinces Israel on Iran but vexes US
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Oct 04, 2013


Most Israelis support Iran strike: poll
Jerusalem (AFP) Oct 04, 2013 - A majority of Israelis would support unilateral military action against Iran, according to a poll published Friday after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his government was ready to act alone.

Some 65.6 percent of 500 Jewish Israelis surveyed by the pro-government Israel HaYom newspaper said they would support military strikes to halt Iran's nuclear programme, and 84 percent believed the Islamic republic had no intention of reining in its alleged drive to build a bomb.

Israel and many Western countries accuse Tehran of trying to develop a nuclear warhead, a charge Iran denies.

Netanyahu in a speech to the UN General Assembly on Tuesday said Israel was ready to act alone to stop Iran making a bomb, in a warning against rushing into deals with Tehran's new leaders.

"Israel will not allow Iran to get nuclear weapons. If Israel is forced to stand alone, Israel will stand alone," Netanyahu told a UN summit, in an attack on overtures made by Iran's President Hassan Rouhani.

Israel has repeatedly advocated military force and has threatened unilateral strikes against the Islamic republic.

A nuclear-armed Iran would be a bigger threat than North Korea, Netanyahu added, in an alarmist speech designed to counter Rouhani's recent diplomatic offensive, which has included a direct phone call with US President Barack Obama.

"As dangerous as a nuclear-armed North Korea is, it pales in comparison to the danger of a nuclear-armed Iran," he said.

"A nuclear-armed Iran in the Middle East wouldn't be another North Korea -- it would be another 50 North Koreas."

North Korea, which like Iran faces wide-ranging UN sanctions over its nuclear program, is believed to have several nuclear bombs and to have shared technology with Iran.

Some 51.4 percent of respondents in HaYom survey said Netanyahu had given a "good speech" at the UN, with only 10.9 percent disagreeing.

HaYom conducted the opinion poll on Wednesday. The margin of error was 4.4 percent.

Israel says no difference with US on Iran nuclear timetable
Jerusalem (AFP) Oct 05, 2013 - Israel on Saturday downplayed apparent differences with the United States over estimates of the amount of time it could take Iran to manufacture a nuclear bomb.

US President Barack Obama had told the Associated Press that Iran was "a year or more away" from getting a nuclear bomb, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had warned that Iran could jump across an Israeli red line within "weeks."

But Israeli officials said Saturday that Netanyahu was not referring to the time it would take Iran to manufacture an atomic bomb, but how long it would take to complete the necessary uranium enrichment for one.

"If Iran decides to complete enriching the uranium, it could do so within weeks of its decision," an official said on condition of anonymity.

Tehran has adamantly denied it is seeking nuclear weapons, insisting that its enrichment programme is for entirely peaceful purposes.

Obama, who spoke to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani in a historic telephone call last week, and then hosted Netanyahu at the White House on Monday, said it remained to be seen if the Iranian president could follow through on his initiative to engage in dialogue.

Netanyahu warned in a speech to the United Nations that Israel would act alone militarily if necessary to defend itself from Iran's nuclear programme, which it views as its greatest security threat.

The Israeli official noted that Netanyahu "does not rule out diplomatic talks with Iran, but insists that these negotiations lead to dismantling Iran's ability to enrich uranium."

Obama has said Iran must verifiably prove its intentions are peaceful in any deal that would ease US-led international sanctions.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's uncompromising United Nations speech on Iran and its nuclear programme has unified ranks at home but vexed the United States, drawing fire from influential American pundits.

"The world must not be fooled by the Iranian ploy into easing the sanctions," Netanyahu said Friday upon returning from New York, adding he would be meeting next week with European leaders on Iran's nuclear programme.

The next talks between world powers and Iran on its controversial nuclear ambitions are due to take place in Geneva on October 15-16.

According to a Friday poll published in pro-Netanyahu daily Israel Hayom, 84 percent of Israelis do not think Iran would halt its nuclear programme.

And 66 percent supported Netanyahu's statement that Israel would "stand alone" against the Islamic republic if necessary.

In a Friday opinion piece in the Washington Post, David Ignatius drew a parallel with the distrust of Israeli premier Golda Meir toward Egyptian president Anwar Sadat before the 1973 Yom Kippur war.

"As Netanyahu thinks now about Iran, he faces a dilemma similar to what confronted Meir: are peace offers from Israel's adversaries serious, or simply a cover for belligerent actions?

"One lesson of 1973 is that it's worth testing through negotiations whether the proposals are real," he wrote.

Roger Cohen took a harsher tone in the New York Times, where he mocks Netanyahu's "tired Iranian tropes."

Netanyahu "needs to stop calling Rouhani 'a wolf in sheep's clothing,' his favoured epithet, and start worrying about crying wolf," writes Cohen.

"Iran has long been an effective distraction from the core dilemma of the Jewish state: Palestine," he charges.

'Movable red line'

Immediately after the Israeli premier's UN speech on Tuesday, the New York Times editorial urged against "sabotaging diplomacy, especially before Iran is tested."

Israeli daily Maariv said the "attack" came from what is "considered the newspaper used by the White House to convey messages," while noting Netanyahu had extended his visit to the US to hammer out his argument in the media, including in an interview with the BBC's Persian service.

US Secretary of State John Kerry assured Israel on Thursday that on Iran, "it's not words that will make a difference, it's actions," but stressed diplomacy must be exhausted before any military option.

The left-leaning daily Haaretz which is critical of Netanyahu likened his media blitz to "carpet bombing" but acknowledged that "one cannot take away from him the last four-and-a-half years, during which he placed the Iranian issue at the top of the international agenda."

Yediot Aharonot, however, played down the importance of the debate.

"The Iranians will not have a nuclear bomb in the next three years, and Israel will not attack Iran on its own, at least until next summer," he wrote.

All Israeli prime ministers since 2002 "have arrived at the same conclusion: the Iranian nuclear issue, which was defined as an existential danger to Israel, must be coped with by all possible means, with the exception of direct military action," it said.

Since then, "Israel has applied the method of the 'movable red line,' which is moved periodically according to circumstances," it said. "The Israeli demand to disarm Iran of all its nuclear assets is no longer realistic."

"The lack of a credible military option leaves Netanyahu with the tools his predecessors had: "PR, deterrence and threats."

The US and its allies suspect Iran of striving to develop nuclear arms under the cover of its civilian nuclear programme, a charge Tehran vehemently denies.

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