MK Binyamin Ben-Eliezer (Labor), a former defense minister
and Labor party leader, expressed support on Tuesday for Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s ongoing criticism of the nuclear deal announced last week
between Western powers and Iran.
Netanyahu “is succeeding in placing the Iran issue on the
international agenda, and he is right to do so,” Ben-Eliezer told Israel Radio
Tuesday morning. The United States, the main broker of the Iran deal, is
Israel’s “most important ally,” Ben-Eliezer continued, but noted that “the
style between the two offices [of the prime minister and the White House] has
to change.”
“There has to be intensive dialogue” between the Prime
Minister’s Office and the Obama administration, so that Netanyahu “will be able
to influence the final agreement [with Iran],” Ben-Eliezer said. “I hope
dialogue over Iran straightens out to where it was in the past, [which] will
allow [Israel] to influence the final agreement.”
Since the interim agreement was announced early last week,
Netanyahu and other Israeli officials have publicly blasted the terms of the
deal, which they say eases crippling sanctions on the Islamic Republic but
still leaves Iran the capacity to quickly build a nuclear bomb if it chooses to
do so.
At a press conference in Rome on Monday, Netanyahu again
expressed strong opposition to the nuclear accord and urged European powers to
demand a substantial rollback from Iran of its nuclear enrichment capabilities
before agreeing to ease an effective sanctions regime. He warned that although
Tehran, led by President Hassan Rouhani, presented a smiling face to the West,
it continued to “butcher people in Syria, to promote terrorism” and to support
Hezbollah and Hamas.
Also on Monday, Jerusalem officials lashed out against US
President Barack Obama for wanting, they said, to reach an agreement with Iran
in order finish his second term in office without getting bogged down in
another conflict.
After anonymous US officials were quoted in the Israeli
press saying that Netanyahu’s outspoken criticism of the interim deal with Iran
was “weak and desperate,” the unnamed officials sniped back, saying Obama only
cared about surviving the remaining three years in office, according to a Ynet
report.
Describing the upheaval-ridden Middle East as “a cauldron of
instability,” Netanyahu on Monday said “a nuclear-armed ayatollah regime in
Iran” would “topple the apple-cart” by tipping the region away from modernity,
stability and “a better future for all of us” and into the hands of those who
“reject modernity, reject pluralism, reject science, reject technology” and aim
to plunge the region into “darkness.”
The prime minister warned that if Iran acquires nuclear
weapons capabilities, it will be “a pivot of history” that will not only upset
progress all over the Middle East, but also might endanger Europe and the world
at large, a possibility which “must be stopped.”
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