Yorkshire Post

Netanyahu: Iran nuclear deal is over, despite Europe support

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ISRAELI PRIME minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said the Iran nuclear deal is effectivel­y over, despite the continuing support of Britain and other European allies.

Mr Netanyahu, who held talks with Theresa May in Downing Street on Wednesday, said the threat of US sanctions on companies which continue to trade with Iran had been decisive. Speaking to the Policy Exchange think-tank in London yesterday he said: “The weight of the American economy forces the issue.

“If you are a European company or an Asian company or any company and you have to choose whether to do business with Iran or forgo doing business with the United States. You have to choose an economy that is about three per cent the size of the American economy or you forgo an economy with 21 trillion dollars GDP, that’s a no-brainer.”

His comments came despite Mrs May’s assertion that the UK, together with France and Germany, remained committed to the agreement – even though President Donald Trump has announced the United States is pulling out. Mr Netanyahu, who also met French president Emmanuel Macron and German chancellor Angela Merkel earlier in the week, said, however, that in practice the Europeans accepted the “economic realities”.

“Companies are pulling out of Iran. And it is a good thing that they are pulling out of Iran because if we have learned anything it is stop aggressive tyrannical regimes early on,” he said in his speech yesterday.

“Don’t accommodat­e them, for god’s sake don’t feed them with cash. Stop them. That’s what I think is happening now.

“So I didn’t spend much time on that because I think it is done. It’s a done deal. My impression is that everybody understand­s the economic realities.”

Mr Netanyahu has long argued the deal – originally signed in 2015 when Barack Obama was president – was ineffectiv­e in constraini­ng Iran’s ambitions to become a nuclear weapons power.

He criticised European government­s for refusing to follow President Trump’s lead in recognisin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and moving the US embassy to the city.

“Why should European government­s say that the capital of Israel will not be in Jerusalem when they know very well that this is a fact that will continue?” he asked.

Companies are pulling out of Iran. And it is a good thing. Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

 ??  ?? BENJAMIN NETANYAHU: He said that the threat of US sanctions had been decisive.
BENJAMIN NETANYAHU: He said that the threat of US sanctions had been decisive.

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