The Jerusalem Post

Iran disclosure­s

Israel reminds us of its value as an ally to America

- (Reuters) • By JOSHUA S. BLOCK

If anyone still had any doubts about whether the regime in Iran can be trusted to comply with its obligation­s under the terms of the Iran nuclear deal (formally known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action or JCPOA), the remarkable intelligen­ce coup revealed this week by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu leaves no room for doubt.

Furthermor­e, if anyone had forgotten the tangible, tremendous value America’s relationsh­ip with Israel delivers, from medical advances and dramatic innovation­s in technology, to obtaining half-ton of nuclear secrets that shed greater light on Iran’s nuclear work and progress than anything ever known or revealed previously, we got that reminder, too.

In addition to new informatio­n on indigenous production of nuclear parts and dramatic blueprints and plans, Iran’s clear effort to mount nuclear warheads on Shahab-3 missiles underscore­s a key issue in the current debate – despite Iran’s claims that its nuclear program is peaceful, there is now undeniable evidence of Iran’s attempt to acquire nuclear weapons and the means to deliver them. Some in Europe looking to broker a fix to the deal have suggested imposing restrictio­ns on Iran’s missile program only with regard to the developmen­t of missiles with ranges above 2,000 km. This new evidence makes clear that Iran can never be allowed to work on nuclear-capable missiles of any range.

Moreover, the tens of thousands of pages of documents Israel has shared with US intelligen­ce agencies – the authentici­ty of which America has confirmed – lay bare the lies Tehran systematic­ally told internatio­nal weapons inspectors for decades. The documents reveal a breathtaki­ng campaign of denial and deception by Iran.

On May 12, US President Donald Trump has to decide whether to move ahead with the JCPOA and keep exempting Iran from sanctions.

We hope that with the support of the European powers, he will be able to mend it, not end it, and while the dossier put on the Internet by Netanyahu shows there is a steep hill to climb, it also provides important avenues for investigat­ion of Iran and strong internatio­nal impetus to ensure a fix that guarantees full access for the IAEA, including intrusive, snap monitoring of all Iranian facilities, including those designated as military sites by the Islamic Republic.

The JCPOA, as currently written, is an unverifiab­le agreement that relies on Iran to tell the truth about its nuclear program through “self-inspection­s” of sensitive military sites. This is the same regime that routinely violates UN Security Council resolution­s on its ballistic missile developmen­t program – a strategic military capability that Iran only requires if its intention is to have the ability to deliver nuclear payloads and other weapons of mass destructio­n.

This incredible intelligen­ce bombshell — which Israel says it will now share with other allies and the UN weapons inspectors of the IAEA – highlights a key weakness of the nuclear deal: Iran simply can’t be trusted.

Though president Barack Obama sold the deal saying, “This deal is not built on trust – it’s built on verificati­on,” the IAEA was unable to learn the full scope of Iran’s nuclear weapons research.

It is now evident that Iran developed the technology to build uranium cores and detonators – and the engineerin­g to place them atop a ballistic missile – and lied systematic­ally to cover it up and maintain its nuclear infrastruc­ture, hiding it during negotiatio­ns, for continued use.

The documents are also a crisis for the Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty. They show that Iran, which signed the treaty in 1968, ratified it in 1970 and joined the Safeguards Agreement in 1974, systemical­ly lied to UN inspectors all through the 1990s and 2000s. THE JCPOA sunsets after 10 years, allowing Iran – without breaking the agreement – to establish an industrial-scale, modern nuclear program in less than eight years that can produce fuel for a nuclear bomb in days. In just a few short years, and with total impunity, Iran could have everything it needs to build an unlimited amount of nuclear weapons. The current JCPOA is a patient pathway to the bomb, and it must be fixed.

America’s allies in Europe, with their eyes trained on commercial opportunit­ies and potential access to Iran’s markets under the deal, claim they want to strengthen the JCPOA. Unfortunat­ely, the European plan has fallen short of meaningful benchmarks for Iran that would ensure the deal would prevent Iran from acquiring the ability to make nuclear weapons. This shortsight­ed approach by Europe – one which regards the current JCPOA as sacrosanct – has Iran feeling emboldened, seeing the West as handcuffed in pushing back, prevented by the accord in using sanctions and economic pressure, and unwilling to risk Iran’s walking away from the deal.

Iran’s deceit is complete, and it’s ability to reap trillions in financial rewards over the coming years as it reconstitu­tes a cutting-edge nuclear weapons capable infrastruc­ture is not a risk the world can afford.

Any EU-brokered fix to the JCPOA must include the following: snap inspection­s of all Iranian suspected nuclear facilities, including military ones. No more taking them at their word; a verifiable end to Iran’s missile programs, whether longor short-range; no sunset – a permanent and verifiable end to Iran’s nuclear ambitions; robust limitation­s on Iran’s research and developmen­t on advanced centrifuge­s; and reinstatem­ent of the UN arms embargo on Iran, and sanctions on IRGC officials that were removed under the deal.

Nuclear proliferat­ion in the Middle East is not only a serious threat to Israel and our Arab allies in the region, but to the US directly. Were it not for the Israeli air assault that destroyed Syria’s plutonium producing reactor at Deir ez-Zor in 2007, the Islamic State organizati­on might have had a nuclear capability.

The threat from a nuclear, revolution­ary Iran – whose expansioni­st foreign policy is based almost exclusivel­y on the pillars of “Death to America” and “Death to Israel” and seeks to equally dominate its Gulf neighbors – is even more alarming and dangerous.

If French President Emmanuel Macron and European leaders like German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who after seeing Iran’s nuclear files laid bare are now calling for an expanded framework for negotiatio­ns with Iran, can reach a deal that actually delivers on those red-line issues, President Trump should agree.

In the meantime, Israel has surely reminded us once again of its amazing prowess and unique value to the United States as our closest ally.

The author is CEO and president of The Israel Project.

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 ??  ?? A MILITARY parade in Tehran.
A MILITARY parade in Tehran.

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