The Jerusalem Post

Israel’s nukes are the true threat to the Middle East, Iran warns UN

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Israel’s atomic weapons are the true threat to Middle East peace, the Iranian and Syrian envoys alleged to the United Nations as they called on the Jewish state to support a regional nuclear-free zone.

“Nuclear weapons in the hands of this regime pose the most serious threat to the security of all states in the Middle East,” the Iranian envoy told the General Assembly’s First Committee Tuesday during a discussion on global nuclear disarmamen­t.

Israel is suspected to be a nuclear power, but has never confirmed or admitted to possessing nuclear weapons.

Countries such as Iran and Syria have long accused it of being a secret nuclear power, particular­ly in rebuttal to accusation­s by Israel of Iran’s pursuit of atomic weapons and Syria’s use of chemical weapons against its citizens.

Israel has attempted “to portray Iran’s nuclear weapons capabiliti­es” as a “challenge to regional stability” in order to distract attention away from its own “nuclear weapon arsenals as well as clandestin­e and unsafe nuclear installati­ons,” the Iranian envoy said.

Israel had not signed the Treaty on the Non-Proliferat­ion of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), he noted, and hampers the establishm­ent of a nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East. Nor has Israel allowed the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency to inspect any of its nuclear weapons facilities, he charged.

Both he and the Syrian envoy spoke in response to a speech by Israel’s Ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan that took both of their countries to task for noncomplia­nce with treaties to which Israel itself is not a full party.

Erdan spoke of Syria’s violations of the Chemical Weapons Convention, a document Israel has signed but never ratified.

Two reports published last year spoke of four Syrian chemical weapons attacks against its own citizens in 2017 and in 2018, he said, adding that the Assad regime had done this even though it had acceded to the CWC.

“It is vital that the internatio­nal community remains vigilant in dealing with this challenge of the noncomplia­nce by Syria, and also continues investigat­ing Syria’s current abilities and activities in regard to its chemical weapons program,” Erdan said.

The ambassador also called on the internatio­nal community to prevent Iran from producing nuclear weapons.

“Coming to terms with Iran becoming a threshold nuclear state puts world peace in the balance and will remain a black stain on the history of the free world,” he said.

At a late point in the debate, a representa­tive of the Israeli mission reminded the General Assembly that Iran is the main sponsor of global terrorism, including through the provision of arms.

Overall, Erdan spoke of the “worrisome escalation in the realm of arms control,” charging that the Middle East “is still struggling with a chronic lack of arms control norms and principles.

“There is an urgent need to focus on the implementa­tion, compliance and verificati­on of the obligation­s of states,” he said.

Erdan then attempted to explain why available instrument­s which Israel has not signed, such as the NPT, are not adequate to handle arms control issues in the Middle East.

“The Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty in itself does not provide a remedy for the unique security challenges of the region, let alone the repeated violations of the treaty by some of its member states. Four of the five cases of serious violations of the NPT took place in the Middle East,” he said.

“Israel wishes to emphasize its long-standing view that the Treaty [on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons] and other weapons of mass destructio­n, which Israel does not support, does not create, contribute to the developmen­t of, or indicate the existence of customary law related to the subject or the content of the treaty,” he said.

“Initiative­s such as the conference on a Middle East Zone Free of Nuclear Weapons and other weapons of mass destructio­n go against the guidelines and principles of the Nuclear Weapons Free Zone,” the ambassador said.

Iran, in its remarks, also spoke about Israeli treatment of the Palestinia­ns. At no point did its envoy use the word “Israel,” preferring instead “the Zionist regime.”

The Iranian envoy accused Israel of “genocide against the Palestinia­ns and “nuclear terrorism” against them.

Prior to the end of 2021, the First Committee is expected to approve a resolution, called “The risk of nuclear proliferat­ion in the Middle East,” put forward by Arab states, including Egypt, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates as well as the Palestinia­n Authority.

Among its stipulatio­ns is a call on Israel to sign and ratify the NPT, noting that it is the only country in the region that hasn’t done so.

 ?? (Official Presidenti­al Website/Handout via Reuters) ?? IRANIAN PRESIDENT Ebrahim Raisi visits the Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran last week.
(Official Presidenti­al Website/Handout via Reuters) IRANIAN PRESIDENT Ebrahim Raisi visits the Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran last week.

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