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NUKEWARS
Isolated Israel, angry with US, denounces Iran deal
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Nov 24, 2013


Waiting to exhale at Iran nuclear talks in Geneva
Geneva (AFP) Nov 24, 2013 - It was a scene we've seen before: the world's top diplomats huddled for crunch Iran nuclear talks as the world held its breath, but this time there was a sigh of relief.

At 2:00 am (0100 GMT) at the posh Intercontinental hotel in Geneva, lavishly dressed party guests at a karaoke bar stepped daintily past bedraggled and sleep-deprived journalists on their way through the lobby, when suddenly word began spreading: There is a deal.

It took five days of marathon talks, with very little official information trickling out, leaving reporters to fend for themselves in a sea of contradictory rumours about what progress, if any, was being made towards a first-step agreement to end a decade-long dispute between world powers and Iran over its nuclear programme.

Just two weeks ago, it was a similar scene: reporters occupied the lobby at the five-star hotel, sipping $10 cups of coffee as they awaited news on progress in the talks.

That time too expectations soared when US Secretary of State John Kerry and his British, French, German and Russian counterparts unexpectedly weighed in on the intense diplomatic talks over Iran's nuclear ambitions, only to crash when the illustrious parties had to go home empty handed.

This time around the talks were if possible an even more of a rollercoaster ride, starting off on Wednesday under the shadow of negative or cautious comments from all sides.

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei insisted his country would not retreat "from its rights," prompting French President Francois Holland to sternly lecture Tehran to "provide answers and not provocations".

Kerry also stressed Wednesday that the United States would not back an agreement that simply let Iran "buy time".

But there is public posturing and then there is what goes on behind closed doors, according to one European negotiator, who insisted Wednesday such "shows of virility" would not interfere with the discussions.

And indeed, by Friday, hopes began rising as it became clear that the countries' top diplomats would again join the talks, this time also including China's Win Yang, leading many observers to conclude that they would only make the trip if it meant signing a deal.

There was meanwhile some confusion over Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov's motives for setting off the influx of top diplomats when he decided to make the trip uninvited.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who hosted the talks, "is always happy to see Minister Lavrov," was all her spokesman would tell AFP when asked about her reaction to his sudden arrival.

Had Lavrov come for the Iran talks alone, or perhaps for a meeting at the United Nations in Geneva on Monday to prepare for a peace conference on war-torn Syria?

"He came for Iran," his spokeswoman said, adding though that he would meet with UN-Arab League peace envoy for Syria Lakhdar Brahimi at the weekend.

Whatever his reasons, Lavrov arrived stressing that the talks presented a "real opportunity", drawing ever more optimistic analyses.

But as the other foreign ministers began arriving early Saturday, each stressing the difficulties that remained, the narrative shifted again with predictions the sides were too far apart to reach an agreement.

Amid a virtual information black-out at the Intercontinental, reporters took breaks from fighting for power outlets and being shooed off the floor by offended hotel staff to wager over which way the talks would go.

Up until the last minute, an equal number of rumours floated around that the sides had reached an agreement and that the deal was dead.

Finally at dawn, the ministers for the six world powers joined their Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif at the UN building to sign the landmark deal.

Isolated and angry with its ally the United States, Israel Sunday bitterly denounced a "bad" nuclear deal between world powers and Tehran while repeating its threat of military action against Iran.

The hostile reaction came as the Jewish state saw months of diplomatic efforts to persuade world powers not to provide sanctions relief to Tehran being swept aside.

Hours after Iran agreed with the P5+1 group -- the United States, China, Russia, France, Britain and Germany -- to row back some of its nuclear activities in exchange for limited sanctions relief, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu charged that "what was achieved in Geneva is not a historic agreement but rather a historic mistake".

Netanyahu's office had earlier called it a "bad agreement" that "gives Iran exactly what it wanted -- a significant easing of sanctions and allows it to keep hold of the most essential parts of its nuclear programme."

Since the election of Iran's new President Hassan Rouhani, whose diplomatic overtures to the West allowed a resumption of dialogue with long-time enemy the United States, Netanyahu repeatedly warned that Tehran's intentions had not changed.

Israel and the West suspect the nuclear programme is aimed at developing a weapons capability but Tehran insists it is entirely peaceful.

The Israeli premier had called Rouhani a "wolf in sheep's clothing" and repeatedly warned world powers against striking a "bad and dangerous" deal with the Islamic republic, saying it could result in war.

Netanyahu reiterated Israel reserved the right to defend itself through military action, telling the UN Security Council in October that his country was ready to order a strike to prevent Iran gaining nuclear weapons capability.

And on Sunday, Israel's hawkish Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman stressed that "all options are on the table".

"The responsibility for the security of the Jewish people and the population of Israel remains the sole responsibility of the Israeli government," he told public radio.

Experts, however, were sceptical that Israel would imminently take such action.

"It's not a great deal, but it's not a disaster either," said Dr Emily Landau of Tel Aviv University's Institute for National Security Studies.

"In terms of (US President Barack) Obama's project of putting time on the clock and not allowing the Iranians to move forward with their nuclear programme during the months of negotiations, the deal is more or less something that can be lived with (for the Israelis)," Landau told AFP.

"As long as the international community is moving into this six-month period where there's supposed to be a negotiated comprehensive deal, it's hard to believe Israel would take action."

Israel's President Shimon Peres was more cautious in his response, pointing to the fact the agreement was "an interim deal" which allowed time for a diplomatic solution.

In a statement, however, he did not rule out a military response.

"Reject terrorism," Peres pleaded with the Iranian people. "Stop the nuclear programme. Stop the development of long-range missiles. Israel like others in the international community prefers a diplomatic solution.

"But ... if the diplomatic path fails, the nuclear option will be prevented by other means," Peres warned.

US Secretary of State John Kerry sought to assuage Israel, insisting the deal was a "first step."

"This first step, I want to emphasise, actually rolls back the programme from where it is today, enlarges the breakout time, which would not have occurred unless this agreement existed.

"It will make our partners in the region safer. It will make our ally Israel safer," Kerry told reporters.

The Geneva deal came just days after Netanyahu, in an apparent snub to the US and a last-ditch effort, travelled to Moscow to try to convince Russian President Vladimir Putin not to enter a deal with Iran.

That trip lived up to predictions by analysts that it would achieve little.

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