Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Israel, Iran issue warnings on deal, await U.S. move

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JERUSALEM — Israel’s prime minister on Sunday stepped up his calls for world powers to end the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran as President Donald Trump decides whether to withdraw from the agreement by next week.

In a briefing to foreign reporters, Benjamin Netanyahu said the world would be better off without any deal than with what he called the “fatally flawed” agreement reached in 2015.

Also on Sunday, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said his country has been preparing for months for the possibilit­y that Trump will pull out of the nuclear agreement, warning that the U.S. would quickly come to regret such a decision.

Netanyahu said Israel is sharing a trove of confiscate­d Iranian nuclear documents with the six world powers that signed the deal, as well as other countries, in hopes of mounting further opposition to the deal. He heads to Moscow later this week for a meeting with President Vladimir Putin, where talks will focus on the Iranian nuclear program and Iran’s involvemen­t in neighborin­g Syria.

“I said it from the start, it has to be either fully fixed or fully nixed,” Netanyahu said. “But if you do nothing to this deal, if you keep it as is, you will end up with Iran with a nuclear arsenal in a very short time.”

Netanyahu was a vocal opponent of the deal when it was reached during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion. The agreement lifted economic sanctions against Iran in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program.

Netanyahu has repeatedly argued that the deal will not prevent Iran from gaining nuclear weapons capability after its restrictio­ns expire in the next decade or so. Trump has voiced similar objections and hinted he will withdraw from the deal unless it is renegotiat­ed.

Netanyahu did not accuse Iran of violating the deal. Instead, he said the deal was so weak that Iran has no need to break it. He said the flaws include permission for Iran to continue some low-level enrichment of uranium and its continued developmen­t of long-range missiles capable of delivering a bomb. He said the nuclear documents unveiled by Israel last week prove that Iran also pursued the knowhow to develop and detonate a bomb.

“I say that a deal that enables Iran to keep and hide all its nuclear weapons knowhow, is a horrible deal,” he said.

In Iran, Rouhani said government officials received instructio­ns months ago on what to do in the event the U.S. decides to end waivers on key sanctions on Saturday, the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency reported. The Iranian president said he’d met with officials from the Atomic Energy Organizati­on of Iran in recent days and discussed a “clear path” ahead.

“The U.S. has always sought to sow intrigue against Iran but has never succeeded in the face of Iran’s greatness,” Rouhani said in a speech, addressing crowds at a rally in the northeaste­rn city of Sabzevar. “This time, once again, it is also making a mistake. And if it wants to leave the nuclear deal, it will quickly see that this decision will be a regret of historic proportion­s.”

Rouhani added that there would be no negotiatio­ns on limiting Iran’s missile power or regional influence.

FRANCE, U.K. WEIGH IN

Trump’s criticism of the deal has given Netanyahu a rare chance to reopen negotiatio­ns that appeared to have concluded in 2015. So far, Europe, China and Russia have shown no interest in revisiting the topic.

European countries have said Netanyahu’s presentati­on only reinforced the importance of the agreement, which provides for inspection­s.

The European parties to the deal have tried in recent weeks to persuade Trump not to pull out.

Earlier on Sunday, President Emmanuel Macron said France and its allies need to be careful about how they handle Iran because terrorist groups may “prosper” from the conflict between Shiites and Sunnis. Britain’s Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson was visiting Washington on Sunday in an effort to salvage the pact and was due to meet with Vice President Mike Pence.

Macron reiterated that he wants to maintain the Iranian nuclear accord, while “complement­ing” it with talks on Iran’s ballistic-missile program and regional activities, according to an interview he gave to Le Journal du Dimanche.

In an op-ed Sunday for The New York Times, Johnson wrote that the agreement offered the fewest disadvanta­ges of all the options available. “It has weaknesses, certainly, but I am convinced they can be remedied. Indeed at this moment Britain is working alongside the Trump administra­tion and our French and German allies to ensure that they are,” he wrote.

The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee also said Sunday that he “would counsel against” Trump pulling the U.S. out of the deal this week. “I thought it was a bad deal,” said Rep. Mac Thornberry, R-Texas. “But the key question is, ‘OK, now we are where we are, what happens next if the U.S. pulls out?’”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Josef Federman and staff members of The Associated Press; by Ben Brody and Golnar Motevalli of Bloomberg News; and by Isabel Kershner and Thomas Erdbrink of The New York Times.

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