Israel's
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) and Defence Minister Ehud Barak
Iran’s
decision to produce fuel rods from a third of its medium-enriched uranium
stockpile delayed its alleged nuclear weapon program, says the Israeli defense
minister. But Tel Aviv continues to advocate a military solution to halting it.
The Iranian move, which clearly clashes with its alleged
goal of obtaining a nuclear bomb as soon as possible, is just a temporary
set-back in Israel’s
eyes and apparently does not change its aggressive rhetoric.
Defense Minister Ehud Barak estimates that Israel
and its allies will have to take decision over a military solution of the
stand-off in “eight to ten months”, because sanctions and diplomacy
will fail to curb Iran’s
nuclear ambition, Britain's
Daily Telegraph cites the minister as saying.
Tehran denies
having any intention of weaponizing its nuclear program, but refuses to stop
uranium enrichment, which it says is needed for civilian purposes. The US,
the EU and their allies have slapped Iran
with crippling economic sanctions to force it to shut down its centrifuges, but
so far the Islamic Republic remains defiant.
In August, Iran
converted some 38 per cent of its uranium enriched to 20 per cent into fuel
rods for its civilian research reactor. Barak says the move somewhat postponed
the critical moment after which Israel
would evaluate that Iran
has enough uranium to produce a nuclear weapon.
The hawkish Israeli minister says the decision probably came
in response to the “public discourse about a possible Israeli or American
operation” against Iran,
as a “diplomatic gambit” to win some time and to appease the UN’s
nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
“Maybe it’s a combination of all these three elements. I
cannot tell you for sure,” he told SW.
Barak insists that the move is just a temporary distraction
and that Iran
still wants to create a nuclear weapon.
“They think of themselves as a major regional power from
the dawn of history and they are determined not to fall into the trap that, in
their mind, in their judgment, the late Gaddafi fell into,” he explained.
Israel
is determined to prevent this from happening and will make a final decision on
an attack before Iran
has fortified its enrichment facilities enough to make Israel
incapable to significantly damage it using its own forces only.
Barak said; “Basically, it’s about the question of when
they come into this zone of immunity, where no Israeli surgical attack,
probably somewhat later not even an American surgical attack, can delay them
significantly. That’s the issue that bothers us.”
‘Arabs will be glad about strike on Iran’
Meanwhile Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu argued
that an attack on Iran would defuse tensions in the Middle East rather then
send them skyrocketing.
"Five minutes after, contrary to what the skeptics
say, I think a feeling of relief would spread across the region," he
told the French magazine Paris Match.
"Iran is not popular in the Arab world, far from
it, and some governments in the region, as well as their citizens, have
understood that a nuclear-armed Iran
would be dangerous for them, not just for Israel,"
he added.
The reasoning seems counterintuitive, since Iran
pledged to retaliate en force to any military operation against it, targeting
both Israeli and American forces deployed in the region. This is likely to
trigger a major regional war, military experts warn.
Both Netanyahu and Barak have voiced a number of veiled
threats against Iran
over its nuclear program over the past year. The Israeli PM spoke at the UN
General Assembly last month, claiming that Tehran
is on the brink of creating a nuclear device.
Intelligence communities in Israel
and the US are
more skeptical, saying the Iran
has long abandoned any attempts at producing an atomic bomb. Experts say if Tehran
chose to change its course on the issue, it would take years before it would
have both the weapon and the means to deliver it.
The US
and other Western countries refused to side with Netanyahu and set a time limit
for Iran to
halt uranium enrichment. While not ruling out a military solution, they say the
prefer sanctions and diplomacy to take root.
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