Israel
under international pressure not to attack Iran alone
Israel
is facing growing international pressure not to attack Iran
unilaterally, with the United States in particular making clear its
firm opposition to any such strike.
31
August, 2012
Recent
rhetoric by Israeli leaders that time is running out to halt Iran's
contested nuclear programme has raised concern that military action
might be imminent, despite repeated calls from abroad to give
sanctions and diplomacy more time to work.
The
U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey,
has always cautioned against a go-it-alone approach, but he appeared
to up the ante this week by saying Washington did not want to be
blamed for any Israeli initiative.
"I
don't want to be complicit if they (Israel) choose to do it,"
Dempsey was quoted as saying by Britain's Guardian newspaper on
Friday, suggesting that he would view an Israeli attack as
reprehensible or illegal.
He
went on to repeat that although Israel could delay Iran's nuclear
project, it would not destroy it. He said that unilateral action
might unravel a strong international coalition that has applied
progressively stiff sanctions on Iran.
"(This)
could be undone if (Iran) was attacked prematurely," he was
quoted as saying.
While
Tehran says its nuclear programme is peaceful, Western powers believe
it is trying to produce an atomic bomb. Israel, believed to have the
only nuclear arsenal in the Middle East, views a nuclear-armed Iran
as a threat to its existence.
Adding
to the sense of urgency, the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency
said on Thursday Iran had doubled the number of uranium enrichment
centrifuges in an underground bunker, showing its desire to expand
its nuclear work.
CRACKS
IN THE ALLIANCE
Israel's
vice prime minister Moshe Yaalon said on Friday he feared Iran did
not believe it faced a real military threat from the outside world
because of mixed messages from foreign powers.
"We
have an exchange of views, including with our friends in the United
States, who in our opinion, are in part responsible for this feeling
in Iran," he told Israel's 100FM radio station.
"There
are many cracks in the ring closing tighter on Iran. We criticize
this," he said, also singling out U.N. Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon for travelling to Tehran this week.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he will speak out about
the dangers of Iran in an address next month to the U.N. General
Assembly in New York.
He
is also expected to hold talks with U.S. President Barack Obama
during his visit. A senior Israeli official told Reuters this month
that Netanyahu would be looking for a firm pledge of U.S. military
action if Iran does not back down.
However,
the meeting might well be icy.
Israel's
top-selling daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported on Friday that there had
been an "unprecedented" and "angry" exchange
between Netanyahu and the U.S. ambassador in Tel Aviv earlier this
month over Iran.
Quoting
a source who was present at the meeting, Netanyahu had criticized
Obama for not doing enough to tackle Iran. The U.S. ambassador Daniel
Shapiro took exception and accused the prime minister of distorting
Obama's position.
The
prime minister's office declined to comment on the report and there
was no initial response from the U.S. embassy.
Adding
to the growing chorus of concern facing Netanyahu, Haaretz newspaper
reported on Friday that German Chancellor Angela Merkel had delivered
a "harsh message" to Netanyahu 10 days ago, telling him to
hold off on any attack plans.
The
German embassy in Tel Aviv declined comment.
Israeli
officials have repeatedly said that a growing array of sanctions
against Iran are not having any impact on the Tehran leadership and
believe they will only back down in the face of a credible threat of
military action.
However,
Netanyahu faces an uphill task persuading his own military and inner
circle of the wisdom of a unilateral strike. Political sources told
Reuters on Tuesday an ultra-orthodox party in his coalition was
opposed to war.
Dempsey:
‘I Don’t Want to Be Complicit’ in Israeli Strike on Iran
The
top US general warned against an Israeli attack on Iran, which would
be counterproductive and dangerous
31
August, 2012
The
United States will not be ‘complicit’ in an Israeli military
strike on Iran, America’s top military general warned
on Thursday,
adding that such an attack would not only fail to destroy Iran’s
nuclear program, but could prompt Iran to reconstitute its weapons
programs.
The
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staffs General Martin Dempsey made
the comments on Thursday in London, pushing back against US and
Israeli warmongers who have advocated for a preemptive military
strike on Iran for a nuclear weapons program it doesn’t even have.
He
warned that an attack by Israel would “clearly delay but
probably not destroy Iran’s nuclear program.” This falls in line
with previous
analysis by the Obama administration and experts that
Iran’s nuclear enrichment is too redundant to be completely
destroyed by Israeli attacks and that such a move may encourage the
Iranians to actually start making weapons to serve as a deterrent for
further strikes.
For
now, Dempsey said, whether Iran even wants nuclear weapons is
inconclusive. But he did warn that diplomatic and economic pressure
on Iran “could be undone if [Iran] was attacked prematurely.”
Previous
attempts at cooling the fiery war rhetoric coming from the Israeli
leadership and some warmongers in Washington have not sunk in. But
Dempsey’s warnings about the counterproductive and dangerous
implications of a needless war on Iran could help lessen the chances
of an Israeli attack in the near-term.
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