Dayton Daily News

Iran derides Israel’s ‘obscene charge’

- By Amir Vahdat

Iran’s foreign minister denounced Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s allegation­s against Tehran at the U.N. General Assembly as an “obscene charge,” the state-run IRNA news agency reported Friday.

The response came after Netanyahu on Thursday claimed at the General Assembly that Iran has a “secret atomic warehouse” on Tehran’s outskirts and challenged U.N. inspectors to examine it.

It was unclear whether Netanyahu’s announceme­nt sheds new light on what U.N. inspectors already know, or whether it was intended to prove that Iran has been violating the landmark 2015 nuclear deal with world powers that followed years of Western sanctions over the country’s contested atomic program.

According to IRNA, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif called Netanyahu a “liar who would not stop lying.”

The 2015 nuclear deal saw Iran drasticall­y limit its enrichment of uranium — a possible pathway to atomic-grade weapons — in exchange for the lifting of crushing economic sanctions. Iran long has denied seeking nuclear weapons and claimed its program is for peaceful purposes only.

In May, President Donald Trump pulled America out of the nuclear deal, in part due to Tehran’s ballistic missile program, its “malign behavior” in the Mideast and its support of militant groups like Hezbollah. The Trump administra­tion has also been re-imposing sanctions on Iran, plunging its economy further into a downward spiral.

For his part, Zarif tweeted that Israel’s the only one with an “undeclared” nuclear weapons program in the region and that it should open it to internatio­nal inspectors.

“No arts & craft show will ever obfuscate that Israel is only regime in our region with a (asterisk) secret (asterisk) and (asterisk) undeclared (asterisk) nuclear weapons program - including an (asterisk) actual atomic arsenal (asterisk). Time for Israel to fess up and open its illegal nuclear weapons program to internatio­nal inspectors,” Zarif said on his Twitter account.

The spokesman of the Iranian Foreign Ministry, Bahram Ghasemi, said Netanyahu’s accusation was “not worth talking about.”

“These farcical claims and the show by the prime minister of the occupying regime (Israel) were not unexpected,” Ghasemi added.

Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, mocked Netanyahu, saying the Israeli leader must have been badly advised.

Netanyahu is known for showmanshi­p at the U.N. General Assembly. In 2012, he famously held up a cartoon of a bomb before the U.N. audience while discussing Iran’s nuclear program.

Netanyahu made a similarly splashy accusation in May, saying Israeli agents spirited away a “half ton” of documents regarding Iran’s nuclear program from a facility in Tehran’s Shourabad neighborho­od.

Separately, Netanyahu in his speech before the General Assembly also held up an image of what he said are rocket factories run by the Iran-backed militant Hezbollah group, hidden in civilian areas of Beirut.

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