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- Kurdish Death Row Prisoner Transferred, His Lawyer Arrested
- Two Prisoners Executed For Espionage in Tehran - Imprisoned Dervish Transferred to Hospital after Heart Attack - Seven prisoners Were Hanged In Northern Iran - Three Prisoners Were Hanged In Central Iran - Dervish Issued Harsh Sentence to Intimidate Others
- Iran acts to expand sensitive nuclear capacity: diplomats
- CIA head visits Israel to discuss Syria, Iran's nuclear program - US targets Iran rial, gold imports in sanctions pressure - Israel air strike on Syria 'is a message to Iran and the US' - Israel Will Strike Iran 's Subterranean Nuclear Sites - Iran, not Israel, faces an existential threat, says top US analyst
- Religious leaders ban 30 women from running for Iran's presidency
- Iranian cleric: Women can't be president in Iran - Iranians marrying foreigners without state consent face prosecution - More women smuggling drugs out of Iran - Canada’s High Court could try Iran for Zahra Kazemi murder - "Hole"/ Saba Vasefi
- When it comes to Syria and Hezbollah, Israel is walking a tightrope
- IRGC: World now eying Iranian regime's resistance - Two Iranians in Kenya found guilty of bomb plots - Iran develops rocket-launcher submarine, smart ships - Iran to unveil indigenous ballistic, cruise missiles - Why Iran Is Trying to Save the Syrian Regime |
Tuesday 17 April 2012Barak says Israel never ruled out attacking Iran
AP -- Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Tuesday his country has never promised the United States it would hold off from attacking Iran while nuclear talks were taking place. The comments, in which Barak said that a diplomatic push to reach a compromise with Iran was a waste of ”precious time,” further exposed a rift between Israel and the US over how to deal with Iran and its nuclear program. ”We are not committing to anything,” Barak told Israel’s Army Radio. ”The dialogue with the Americans is both direct and open.” Israel, arguing that a nuclear Iran would pose an existential threat, has said it will not allow Tehran to acquire a nuclear weapon. It cites Iranian calls for Israel’s destruction, Iran’s support for Arab militant groups and its development of missiles capable of striking the Jewish state. Fearing that Iran is moving quickly toward nuclear capability, Israel has repeatedly hinted at an attack if Iran’s uranium enrichment program continues to advance. Enrichment is a key process in developing weapons, and Israel says Iran is closely approaching a point where it can no longer be stopped. The US favors diplomacy and economic sanctions and has said military action on Iran’s nuclear facilities should only be a last resort if all else fails. Officials from the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany met with Iran in Istanbul last weekend to discuss the country’s nuclear program. The talks were described as positive, and they agreed to meet again on May 23 in Baghdad. Barak told Israel’s Army Radio he did not believe the talks would prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. ”We regret the time being lost. This is precious time,” he said. Barak said the talks needed to yield quick results. ”It requires a few direct meetings where all the demands are put on the table. There you can see if the other side is playing for time, drawing it out through the year, or if indeed the other side is genuinely striving to find a solution,” he said. ”In this light, any ‘time-outs,’ especially when they are this long, do not serve our interests,” he said. ”Unfortunately, we maintain the view that this will probably not have an impact or bring the Iranians to cease their nuclear program. Of course we will be happy to be proven wrong,” he added. Earlier this week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Iran got a ”freebie” from the international community, saying the May meeting gave the Iranians an additional five weeks to continue uranium enrichment without any restrictions. He said Iran should be forced to stop this immediately. Netanyahu was publicly rebuked by President Barack Obama, who said the US had not ”given anything away” in the talks. Iran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes and says it does not seek a bomb. The US and its allies doubt the sincerity of that. The Obama administration has urgently sought to hold off Israeli military action, which would likely result in the US being pulled into a conflict. |