Israeli Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a news conference at the Ministry of Defence |
Israel said it does not seek war with Iran and suggested U.S. President Donald Trump backed Israelโs latest attempt to kill the 2015 Iran nuclear deal by disclosing purported evidence of past Iranian nuclear arms work.
A senior Israeli official said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had informed Trump at a March 5 meeting about alleged evidence seized by Israel in what Netanyahu on Monday presented as a โgreat intelligence achievementโ.
U.S. and Israeli officials said the information showed Iran had lied about its past work to develop nuclear arms but intelligence experts said there was no smoking gun showing that Tehran had violated the nuclear deal under which it curbed its atomic program in return for relief from economic sanctions.
Tehran, which denies ever pursuing nuclear weapons, dismissed Netanyahu as โthe boy who cried wolf,โ and called his presentation propaganda.
Trump agreed at the March meeting that Israel would publish the information before May 12, the day he is due to decide whether the United States should quit the nuclear deal with Iran, an adversary of both countries, the Israeli official said.
Word of the consultations between Trump and Netanyahu serves to underscore perceptions of a coordinated bid by both leaders to bury the international agreement, which Trump has called โhorribleโ and Netanyahu has termed โterrible.โ
Others briefed on the material in March included Mike Pompeo, who was then CIA director and is now secretary of state; Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and former White House National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster, a former U.S. official said.
DEADLINE LOOMS
Trump gave Britain, France and Germany a May 12 deadline to fix what he views as the dealโs flaws โ its failure to address Iranโs ballistic missile program, the terms by which inspectors visit suspect Iranian sites, and โsunsetโ clauses under which some of its terms expire โ or he will reimpose U.S. sanctions.
Trump has yet to say whether he will withdraw from it.
While nonproliferation experts and a U.S. official said it was clear Netanyahu wanted to undermine the deal, they said Trump could also choose to use the Israeli information to demand deeper inspections of Iranโs nuclear program.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the U.N. nuclear watchdog, has the right under the 2015 deal to seek access to suspect Iranian sites and the Israeli claims could provide it a roadmap.
Olli Heinonen, a former IAEA deputy director, said the purported records seized by Israel appeared to show Iran failed to disclose all aspects of its nuclear weapons program to the agency as required by the Iran nuclear deal.
โThey were supposed to tell everything to the IAEA,โ he said. โNow I have to raise the question: did they really comply with these requirements? The IAEA has to go back to see how far they really got in this program and was it really stopped.โ
The U.S. intelligence community and the IAEA have previously concluded that Iran, despite its denials, had a nuclear weapons program that it largely stopped in 2003, although some activities continued. In December 2015, the IAEA said it had no indications any such activities took place in Iran after 2009.
Israeli officials on Monday briefed nonproliferation experts about the material they say they seized but did not say whether they believed it proved Iran had violated the nuclear deal, several people familiar with the briefing told Reuters.
โFALSE PRETENSESโ
In his televised presentation, Netanyahu said Israel had obtained tens of thousands of pages of what he described as Iranโs โsecret atomic archivesโ from what looked from the outside to be a dilapidated Tehran warehouse.
The senior Israeli official said Israel knew about the Iranian archive for a year, got hold of it in February and informed Trump about it at a meeting in Washington on March 5.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders told reporters that the Israeli announcement offered proof that the Iran deal was made โunder false pretensesโ as Trump decides whether to withdraw the United States.
โThe president has been very clear that he thinks the deal is one of the worst that weโve ever seen and weโll keep you posted on when he has made a final decision,โ she said.
On Tuesday Netanyahu told CNN that โnobodyโ sought a conflict with the Islamic Republic, a prospect seen by some as a possible result of the dealโs collapse.
Asked if Israel is prepared to go to war with Tehran, Netanyahu said: โNobodyโs seeking that kind of development. Iran is the one thatโs changing the rules in the region.โ
But Netanyahuโs presentation said the evidence showed Iran lied going into the deal, a landmark agreement seen by Trump as flawed but by European powers as vital to allaying concerns that Iran could one day develop nuclear bombs.
Iranian officials rejected the Israeli claims.
โWe warn the Zionist regime and its allies to stop their plots and dangerous behaviours or they will face Iranโs surprising and firm response,โ Iranian Defence Minister Amir Hatami was quoted as saying by Iranian news agency Tasnim on Tuesday. Hatami called Netanyahuโs accusations โbaselessโ.
Former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, in a series of tweets on Tuesday, said the information disclosed by Israel was proof of why the agreement should be retained.
โThere was no negotiation โ and all of that changed with (the deal). Blow up the deal and youโre back there tomorrow!โ said Kerry, who negotiated the pact.