The Daily Telegraph

Tehran has to comply with deal it signed or face the consequenc­es

- By Con Coughlin DEFENCE EDITOR

‘Netanyahu will be hoping that his latest revelation­s will help to persuade Mr Trump to ditch the deal later this month’

Benjamin Netanyahu’s revelation­s that Iran has been running a secret programme to build nuclear weapons were delivered yesterday with one specific aim: to persuade the Trump administra­tion to cancel the nuclear deal with Tehran.

Washington has until May 12 to decide whether or not to renew its support for the deal, which was finally implemente­d in the summer of 2015 after Barack Obama invested an enormous amount of political capital in reaching an agreement with Iran.

The former president believed the agreement negotiated between Iran and six major powers – including Britain – was the best means of persuading the ayatollahs to scale down their nuclear-related activities, which most Western intelligen­ce officials believed was aimed at developing nuclear weapons. In return the West agreed to lift many of the crippling sanctions it had imposed on Tehran.

Israel, though, remained deeply sceptical about Iran’s insistence that its nuclear activities were entirely peaceful. Its ministers had criticised Tehran’s decision to continue its work on developing ballistic missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads, with the ability of making a direct strike on Israel.

There has been growing disquiet in Jerusalem, too, about the growing influence of Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard throughout the Middle East, particular­ly in neighbouri­ng Syria, where Iran has establishe­d a network of self-sufficient military bases.

The seriousnes­s with which the Israelis view these developmen­ts was demonstrat­ed on Sunday night when the Israeli military launched another missile attack on Iranian positions in Syria.

Mr Netanyahu will therefore be hoping that his latest revelation­s, which he insists are “new and conclusive proof ” that Iran has been concealing the true extent of its nuclear ambitions from the outside world for decades, will help to persuade Mr Trump to ditch the deal later this month.

In his presentati­on, he said the Jewish state had obtained tens of thousands of pages of documents relating to Iran’s clandestin­e plan to develop nuclear weapons, known as Project Amad, which had been hidden at a secret location in Tehran since the deal was signed.

The documents are said to show that Iran has retained the ability and know-how to continue working on its nuclear weapons programme.

Iran’s failure to come clean about its nuclear intentions is nothing new.

For a decade or more prior to signing the deal, Iranian officials regularly failed to cooperate with the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, the Un-sponsored watchdog responsibl­e for monitoring nuclear operations.

On one occasion the Iranians demolished and removed a key nuclear installati­on – including the soil it was built upon – to prevent UN inspectors from investigat­ing claims that traces of weapons-grade uranium had been found at the site.

But while Iran’s double-dealing went unpunished by Mr Obama, desperate to avoid confrontat­ion with Tehran at all costs, the same cannot be said for the Trump administra­tion.

On the contrary, with renowned hawks like Mike Pompeo, the new secretary of state, and John Bolton, the national security adviser, holding key positions in the Trump administra­tion, Iran could soon face a stark choice: either comply with the terms of the deal, or face the consequenc­es.

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