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Israel cannot afford to be 'duped' by Iran: Barak
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) April 30, 2012


Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak said Monday he had little confidence that key talks between Iran and world powers would succeed in resolving the standoff over Tehran's disputed nuclear programme.

While Barak said the barrage of international sanctions imposed on Iran has clearly worked and forced the Islamic Republic to sit down and talk, he was not hopeful that the talks would lead anywhere.

"Today sanctions are stronger than ever. They've forced the Iranians to take note, to sit down and to talk," he told journalists at a meeting of the Foreign Press Association in Jerusalem.

"The P5+1 engagement with Iran, however, does not fill me with confidence. I may sound pessimistic but the state of Israel cannot afford to be duped."

Six world powers, known as the P5+1 grouping of diplomats from the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany, held a first round of talks with Iran in Istanbul on April 14, with a second, more in-depth round due to take place in Baghdad on May 23.

"They say a pessimist is merely an optimist with experience," he quipped.

"In this case, you don't have to look back too far to understand the tactics of Iran. And while I hope to be proven wrong, as Israel's minister of defence I have responsibility to the people of Israel not to ignore the risks."

The UN Security Council has slapped four rounds of sanctions on Tehran over suspicions harboured by Israel and much of the West that Iran is seeking a militarised nuclear capability -- a charge which Tehran denies.

Rather than taking the necessary steps to scale back its nuclear programme, Iran was getting closer to the "zone of immunity" when their facilities would be protected from any external strike, Barak said.

"Actions speak louder than words. On the ground, the Iranians keep moving and are determined to obtain nuclear weapons," he said.

"And they are getting closer. We are approaching what I've termed the immunity zone -- the moment when Iran's nuclear programme will be sufficiently developed and secretly concealed, that it will be immune to any surgical attacks."

Of special concern is Iran's formerly secret Fordo site which is located deep inside a mountain bunker near the holy city of Qom, where its centrifuges are enriching uranium to 20 percent purity.

Israel has not ruled out a preemptive strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, and Barak said that as long as Iran posed a future existential threat to the Israeli people, all options remained open.

"It is well understood in Washington DC as well as in Jerusalem, that as long as a there is a future existential threat to our people, all options to prevent Iran from getting nuclear weapons should remain on the table -- and they will," he said.

"I have enough experience to know by now that the military option will be complicated with certain associated risks. But a nuclear Islamic Republic of Iran would be far more dangerous, both for the region and to the whole world.

"Our number one consideration is to ensure that our fate will remain firmly in our hands."

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Baghdad talks will not resolve all issues: Khamenei aide
Tehran (AFP) April 30, 2012 - May 23 talks in Baghdad between Iran and world powers focused on Tehran's nuclear programme will likely not resolve all issues, an aide to Iran's supreme leader said on Monday.

But Gholam Ali Hadad Adel, a lawmaker who is a senior adviser to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, insisted that the powers on the other side of the table should lift their "illogical sanctions" at the meeting, according to the Mehr news agency.

"Iran expects the P5+1 group to put an end to the illogical sanctions in Baghdad, because the inefficiency of sanctions is proven even for Western leaders," he said, referring to the P5+1 grouping comprising the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany.

"They can show their goodwill through a trust-building effort by" lifting the sanctions, Hadad Adel said.

"Although one should not expect for all issues to be resolved in Baghdad, we can assume the (atmosphere) of the talks will follow in the footsteps of Istanbul," he said.

The Baghdad talks follow on from discussions revived April 13-14 in Istanbul after a 15-month impasse.

While the Istanbul meeting managed to set a positive tone for talks to continue, the Baghdad round is seen as the first substantive meeting in which contentious issues will be broached.

Ali Larijani, speaker of Iran's parliament, said on Monday that "one should not quickly judge" the Istanbul talks, according to the ISNA news agency.

"So far, the format of the talks was a positive move. But we have to see content-wise how many correct steps will be taken," he said.

"The current problem is not the appearance of the talks. The problem is that the West imposes sanctions behind the scenes while in public it smiles at us. And these two contradictory behaviours are not compatible. The West should take positive practical steps," he said.

The United States, which is leading Western economic sanctions imposed on Iran, is reportedly floating a concession to allow Iran minimal enrichment of uranium -- previously a no-go option -- if the Islamic republic in return permits more invasive inspections of its nuclear activities.

Iran has sent signals suggesting it could negotiate over its medium-enriched uranium process, but officials have repeatedly said that the Western sanctions should be eased.

Tehran rejects Western accusations that it is seeking nuclear weapons capability.

Iranian officials are to hold a separate meeting before Baghdad, on May 13-14, with representatives from the International Atomic Energy Agency to address suspicions the UN nuclear watchdog also harbours.



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NUKEWARS
Sanctions unlikely to stop Iran atomic plans: Barak
Jerusalem (AFP) April 27, 2012
Israel's defence minister said existing sanctions against Iran are unlikely to make it give up what Israel and much of the international community believe is a covert nuclear arms programme. Speaking late Thursday, Ehud Barak acknowledged that current sanctions on Iranian trade and banking are tougher than ever, and that a new round of talks is due on May 23 between Tehran and international ... read more


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