Sunday 5 April 2015

Netanyahu Blasts Iran Nuclear Deal Again

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday again denounced
the agreement between Tehran and world powers as a "bad deal" that
"endangers" Israel and will leave Iran with a large nuclear
infrastructure.

An outline deal agreed in Switzerland on Thursday paves the way for
Tehran to curtail its nuclear activity in exchange for relief from
punishing economic sanctions.

"It doesn't roll back Iran's nuclear program," Netanyahu told CNN, one
of several US networks he appeared on to slam the deal.

"It keeps a vast nuclear infrastructure in place. Not a single
centrifuge is destroyed. Not a single nuclear facility is shut down,
including the underground facilities that they built illicitly.
Thousands of centrifuges will keep spinning enriching uranium. That's
a bad deal."

Israel's government reacted angrily to the historic agreement, with a
June 30 deadline for a final deal, with Netanyahu demanding that
Iranian recognition of the Jewish state's right to exist be written
into the deal.

"If a country that vows to annihilate us and is working every day with
conventional means and unconventional means to achieve that end, if
that country has a deal that paves its way to nuclear weapons, many
nuclear weapons, it endangers our survival," the prime minister said.

"I'll tell you what else will happen," he added. "I think it will also
spark an arms race with the Sunni states," a reference to Gulf
monarchies.

Saudi Arabia fears that if too much of Iran's nuclear program is left
intact, it will still have the ability to obtain an atomic bomb, and
there are concerns that Riyadh could seek its own nuclear capability.

Iran and Saudi Arabia, the foremost Shiite and Sunni Muslim powers in
the Middle East, have had troubled relations in recent years after
taking different sides in the Syrian civil war.

- Relations with US at low point -
Netanyahu told ABC News that the money that will flow back into Iran
as sanctions ease will not be used to help the population.

"It lifts the sanctions on them fairly quickly and enables them to get
billions of dollars into their coffers," he said.

"They're not going to use it for schools or hospitals or roads ...
they're going to use it to pump up their terror machine worldwide and
their military machine that is busy conquering the Middle East now."

Relations between Israel and its traditionally staunch US ally are at
a low and were hugely damaged when Netanyahu took the unprecedented
step of addressing Congress last month to attack the nuclear
negotiations with Iran.

When asked if he trusts President Barack Obama, Netanyahu replied: "I
trust that the president is doing what he thinks is good for the
United States, but I think that we can have a legitimate difference of
opinion on this because I think Iran has shown to be completely
distrustful."

One part of the complex deal would see Iran slash by more than
two-thirds the number of uranium centrifuges -- which can make fuel for
nuclear power but also the core of a nuclear bomb -- to 6,104 from
around 19,000 for 10 years.

California Senator Dianne Feinstein, also speaking on CNN, said
Netanyahu's comments could "backfire on him."

"I wish that he would contain himself because he has put out no real
alternative," Feinstein said.

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