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Thursday 11 October 2012Advisor: Israeli strike on Iran less likely if Romney winsAFP An ill-advised Israeli strike against Iran would be less likely if Republican candidate Mitt Romney wins the presidential elections because he would shore up strained US relations with Israel, an advisor said Thursday. If the Republican nominee wins the race for the White House, he would tighten sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program and bolster ties with Israel, which have deteriorated under President Barack Obama's administration, said Dov Zakheim, a foreign policy adviser to the candidate. "If you don't want the Israelis to go off half-cocked, and I don't think there's anybody in the American national security community that does, the way to do it is not to create daylight between us and the Israelis," Zakheim told a group of defense reporters. If Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu retains his post after elections next year, and if Obama wins a second term in the White House, the Israeli leader might be more inclined to take unilateral military action due to the tense relationship with Washington, Zakheim said. He said that Obama had mismanaged relations with Israel and "that's why the polls in Israel consistently show Mr. Obama as being the most unpopular American president that Israelis have ever identified." "And you still have 20 countries that somehow are being let off the hook on these sanctions," he said. But he said the Obama team was asking Israel to trust US intelligence reporting, which he suggested was unreliable. Referring to last month's deadly attack on a US consulate in Libya, he said it was "the same intelligence community that didn't seem to know… what was going to happen in Benghazi, that didn't seem to know about the Arab Spring." A Reuters poll held Thursday said that Romney has pulled ahead of Obama in the race for the White House and now has a very narrow lead – 45% to 44% among likely voters. |