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US-Israel divisions over Iran boil over

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel is sounding increasingly agitated over what it views as American dithering with economic sanctions too weak to force Iran to end its suspected drive toward nuclear weapons.

In a clear message aimed at the White House, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday criticized what he said was the world’s failure to spell out what would provoke a U.S.-led military strike against Iranian nuclear facilities. The comments came in response to U.S. refusals in recent days to set “red lines” for Tehran.

With his strong words, Netanyahu is taking a bold gamble. He clearly hopes to rattle the U.S. into doing more, for fear that Israel might otherwise soon attack Iran on its own. But he risks antagonizing President Barack Obama during a re-election campaign and straining relations with Israel’s closest and most important ally. Relations between the two leaders have often been tense in the past.

Israeli officials say American politics do not factor into their thinking, but that the sense of urgency is so grave that the world cannot hold its breath until after the November election.

“The world tells Israel, ‘Wait. There’s still time,”’ Netanyahu said Tuesday. “And I say: ‘Wait for what? Wait until when?’ Those in the international community who refuse to put red lines before Iran don’t have a moral right to place a red light before Israel.”

Israel views a nuclear-armed Iran as a mortal threat, citing Iran’s persistent calls for the destruction of the Jewish state, its development of missiles capable of striking Israel, and Iranian support for Arab militant groups.

Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.

Although the United States has accused Iran of trying to develop nuclear weapon capability under the cover of a peaceful program, the Obama administration has said it does not believe Iran has decided whether to build an atomic bomb — if it in fact develops the ability to do so.

Israeli officials believe time is running short with Iran moving perilously close to reaching weapons capability. They point to Iranian enrichment of uranium, a key ingredient in building a bomb, the movement of Iranian nuclear research facilities to fortified underground bunkers impervious to attack, and Iran’s refusal to open its facilities to U.N. inspectors.

On Tuesday, diplomats told The Associated Press that the U.N. atomic agency has received new and significant intelligence over the past month that Iran has advanced its work on calculating the destructive power of an atomic warhead through a series of computer models within the past three years.

The diplomats who spoke to the AP said the information came from Israel, the United States and at least two other Western countries They demanded anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss classified information member countries make available to the IAEA.

The information could strengthen concerns that Iran has continued weapons work into the recent past b(euro) ” and may be continuing to do so. Because computer modeling work is normally accompanied by physical tests of the components that go into nuclear weapons, it would also buttress fears by the International Atomic Energy Agency that Tehran is advancing its weapons research on multiple fronts.

“The two go hand in hand,” said David Albright, whose Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security is a frequent go-to source on Iran for Congress and other U.S. government branches.

In Tehran, Foreign Ministry spokesman Rahmin Mehmanparast told reporters that Iran will start answering the agency’s “questions and concerns” only when “our rights and security issues” are recognized.

Israel says such evidence is concrete proof that Iran is well on its way to reaching weapons capability, perhaps in the coming months.

Differences with the U.S. over how to deal with Iran have boiled over into palpable tensions in recent weeks.

Earlier this week, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said “it is not useful” to be setting deadlines or outlining “red lines.” She also noted that Obama has stated unequivocally that the United States will not allow Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon.

On Tuesday, she said the Iranian situation is a matter of “intense discussion” with Israel. She declined to elaborate, saying she did not want to conduct diplomacy in public.

But privately, U.S. officials have bristled at how Israel has publicly played up the differences and publicly lectured Washington on its responsibilities.

They have also been irked by what they see is Netanyahu’s attempts to exploit the campaign season to push the U.S. into difficult positions. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were discussing a sensitive diplomatic matter.

Though they stopped short of accusing Netanyahu of taking sides in the election, the Israeli prime minister has a longtime relationship with Republican candidate Mitt Romney and with Sheldon Adelson, a casino magnate and top donor to the Republican Party.

Romney, who visited Israel in July, has repeatedly criticized Obama’s handling of the nuclear issue.

Obama and Netanyahu have long had a rocky relationship, because of policy differences and a lack of personal chemistry. In one famous incident, a frustrated Obama left a White House meeting with Netanyahu to go eat dinner with his family.

U.S. and Israeli officials confirmed Tuesday that Obama would not meet with Netanyahu when the Israeli leader goes to New York for the U.N. General Assembly later this month. Both sides cited scheduling issues and rejected suggestions that Netanyahu had been snubbed.

Comments

John 8 months, 1 week ago

Open your eyes, Obama. YOU are forcing Israel to draw the line by not drawing it yourself. On your shoulders lies the blame for any overt act by any of the countries.

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eileen10 8 months, 1 week ago

Where will a war between Iran and Israel put us if it happens?

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John 8 months, 1 week ago

Nobody really knows because of the id i *t who is running this country. . . He will probably come down on the side of Iran, anyone except Israel or his own country (at least we THINK that this is his country).

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JCLifer 8 months, 1 week ago

The AP does it again. Instead of telling the truth that Obama hates Israel and would quickly side with his muslim brothers against Israel, the AP says that Israel's leader had bad body chemistry.

The question is will the American people support bombing of Israel?

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asb 8 months, 1 week ago

We will back Isreal Eileen. We always have and always will. The President has said so on many occaisions. Only idi0ts wishing to do or say anything they can to discredit the President say otherwise.

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eileen10 8 months, 1 week ago

All I can say is that I hope a war doesn't break out. I feel we stick our nose in where it doesn't belong and our people die because of it. Not that I'm an expert on this but if a country goes to war and we're their friend why should we have to get involved?

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asb 8 months, 1 week ago

Two reasons to go to war: to protect Isreal, and to keep SUV food flowing to us through our energy industry. Would we fight the oil sources to save Isreal? The GOP oil boys wouldn't, but Obama would.

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eileen10 8 months, 1 week ago

I was typing when you answered asb. Oh boy. I didn't mean to start a war here. I realize how different people feel from reading the posts as far as Pres. Obama is concerned. So please men. Don't start fighting. I guess we just have to take a wait and see attitude if a war does break out.

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eileen10 8 months, 1 week ago

I'm a two fingered typer so it takes me a while. So it's pretty much a wait and see what happens. Thanks men for what you said. Lets just hope all this can be settled without people getting killed.

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asb 8 months, 1 week ago

These forums are specifically for opinion and tussle, so let it happen. People are already being killed, scores of thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands dead in the middle east since 1990, many by American hands, and big parts of a million during the Iraq/Iran war. And our involvement is direct and blooded. Our stake in this part of the world is too great not to keep at the war we're already in, with thousands of Americans dead and trillions spent. Isreal has had the technology and military skill (much from England and the US) to win a series of wars over the past seven decades, but time, our money spent on arab oil, and a growing, if mostly leaderless at present, al-qaida-ism (to use a top American defense dude's phrase), have made Isreal vulnerable, even to wackos with rockets. A full war against Isreal by Iran would mean a full and vicious American response, hopefully financed properly. Just to dust it up a bit more, let's not forget that while the extremists in this country lie about Obama's brotherhood with Islam, the oil boys, led by the Bush dynasty, are all but marrying into the Saudi (profoundly fundamentalist Sunni Muslim) families. Russia has its own war against extremist Islam in it's south, and they are financially bound to Syria, an Iranian ally, so woot, WWIII could be imagined. Not likely, what with the Arab Spring bring sanity to the middle east and Isreal having to deal with an increasingly powerful Palestine, but possible.

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eileen10 8 months, 1 week ago

Ok. I see what your saying. Thats some heavy..and scarey stuff. I just have one more question. Do we have what ever it takes to not be attacked by foreign powers over here in our country? As in could missles or planes dropping bombs ever reach us?

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Littleinvestor 8 months, 1 week ago

If this country had a "Manhattan-style" program to make hydrogen a competitive fuel, we would not need to be fighting in the Middle East. Isreal is a thorny problem, though. My thoughts are divided there. Our military is worn out by 11 years of war and I don't want this country in continuous warfare. Still, Isreal has a right to exist and we have always aided the country even though both the U.S. and the British tried to keep the country from being founded in the first place (read your history.)

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