Renewed international efforts to negotiate curbs on Iran's
disputed nuclear program have backfired by giving it more time to work on
building a bomb, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday.
His remarks on the inconclusive February 26-27 meeting between
Iran and six world powers signaled impatience by Israel, which has threatened
to launch preemptive war on its arch-foe, possibly in the coming months, if it
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diplomacy a dead end.
Senior U.S. diplomat Wendy Sherman flew in to brief Israel about
the Kazakh-hosted talks, in which Tehran, which denies seeking nuclear arms,
was offered modest relief from sanctions in return for halting mid-level
uranium enrichment.
There was no breakthrough. The sides will reconvene in Almaty on
April 5-6 after holding technical talks in Istanbul.
"My impression from these talks is that the only thing that
is gained from them is a buying of time, and through this time-buying Iran
intends to continue enriching nuclear material for an atomic bomb and is indeed
getting closer to this goal," Netanyahu told his Cabinet in remarks aired
by Israeli media.
Extrapolating from U.N. reports on Iran's enrichment of uranium
to 20 percent fissile purity, a short technical step from weapons-grade, Netanyahu
has set a mid-2013 "red line" for denying the Islamic republic the
fuel needed for a first bomb.
Iranian media reported on Sunday the country was building around
3,000 new advanced enrichment centrifuges, a development that could accelerate
the nuclear project.
The prospect of unilateral Israeli strikes, and the likely
wide-ranging reprisals by Iran and its regional allies, worries Washington,
which wants to pursue diplomacy as it winds down costly military commitments
abroad.
In an attempt to make their proposals more palatable to Tehran,
the United States and five other world powers appeared to have softened
previous demands in Almaty - for example regarding their requirement that the
Iranians ship out their stockpile of the higher-grade uranium.
A senior Israeli official said that while the Netanyahu
government had hoped for a tougher line by the so-called P5+1, it was resigned
to awaiting the results of this round of talks.
"At the end of the day, what matters is that the Iranians
end their enrichment, whether it's through shutting down their facilities or
through more nuanced technical safeguards," the official, speaking on
condition of anonymity, told Reuters.
The official would not comment on how or if the latest diplomacy
had affected the readiness of Israel, which is widely assumed to have the
region's only nuclear arsenal, to go to war.
Iran may have warded off that threat by turning some of its 20
percent-pure uranium into fuel rods for a research reactor.
The international standoff and shifting timelines are expected
to dominate U.S. President Barack Obama's trip to Israel later this month. The
Israelis urge a tougher posture on Iran from their ally, which has a hefty
military presence in the Gulf and says it is poised to use force as a last resort.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak, in a speech in Washington
to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, echoed Netanyahu in voicing
doubt that diplomacy would stop Iran's nuclear ambitions.
"Therefore, all options must remain on the table," he
told the pro-Israel lobby group. "We expect all those who say it to mean
it. We mean it."
Israel's dovish president, Shimon Peres, sounded more upbeat
after meeting Sherman last Thursday. Peres said he had "total faith in the
Obama administration, in its commitment and its actions in preventing Iran from
developing nuclear weapons".
Obama's Israel visit has been overshadowed by local politics
too, given the rightist Netanyahu's failure so far you will know the thing on the china deals to build a new coalition government after he narrowly won a
January 22 ballot.
Appealing to potential party allies to rally to him in the name
of national security, Netanyahu told his cabinet: "To my regret this is
not happening, and in the coming days I will continue my efforts to unify and
galvanize forces ahead of the major national and international challenges that
we face."
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