Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Officials prepare lobbying strategy against Iran deal

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JERUSALEM>> Israel’s prime minister on Sunday urged world powers to step up pressure on Iran as they finalize a nuclear deal in the coming months, saying there was still time to improve what he said was a deeply f lawed framework agreement reached last week.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s appearance­s on multiple American TV news programs on Sunday signaled the launch of what is expected to be a furious lobbying effort to scuttle or reshape a deal that he has criticized as “bad” and a threat to Israel’s very existence. A document drawn up by experts in Netanyahu’s office, obtained by The Associated Press, gives a glimpse of the arguments the Israeli leader is going to raise, targeting vague language in the system of inspection­s and its failure to address issues beyond the nuclear program.

The framework agreement was announced on Thursday in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, by U.S.-led world powers and Iran after years of negotiatio­ns.

The deal aims to cut significan­tly into Iran’s bomb-making technology while giving Tehran relief from internatio­nal sanctions. The commitment­s, if implemente­d, would substantia­lly pare down Iranian nuclear assets for a decade and restrict others for an additional five years.

Netanyahu believes the deal leaves too much of Iran’s suspect nuclear program intact, would give it quick relief from economic sanctions and create an easy path for the Islamic Republic to gain the ability to produce a bomb. He also says the deal fails to address Iran’s support for militant groups across the Middle East.

“I think the alternativ­es are not either this bad deal or war. I think there’s a third alternativ­e. And that is standing firm, ratcheting up the pressure, until you get a better deal,” Netanyahu told CNN. “A better deal would roll back Iran’s vast nuclear infrastruc­ture and require Iran to stop its aggression in the region, its terror worldwide, and its calls and actions to annihilate the state of Israel.”

Netanyahu faces an uphill struggle as he takes aim at a deal negotiated by six global powers — the U.S., Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany — and Iran. After last week’s preliminar­y deal, the sides will try to work out a final agreement by a June 30 deadline.

Netanyahu’s criticism has contribute­d to rising tensions with President Barack Obama. Last month, Netanyahu delivered a speech to Congress against the emerging deal, angering the White House because it had not been coordinate­d ahead of time. Obama’s assurances in recent days that the deal would protect Israeli security have had little effect.

The Israeli analysis of the framework raises 10 questions about alleged shortcomin­gs in the framework. It was obtained from an official who declined to be identified because it has not yet been made public.

According to a U.S. document summarizin­g last week’s deal, Tehran is ready to reduce its number of centrifuge­s, the machines that can spin uranium gas to levels used in nuclear warheads, and submit to aggressive monitoring and inspection­s of its nuclear facilities.

But the Israeli analysis claims the system of inspection­s is not as thorough as proclaimed because it does not explicitly force the Iranians to open their sites “anywhere, anytime.”

It also claims the agreement is vague about what happens to Iran’s stock- pile of enriched uranium, a key ingredient in producing nuclear bombs, or how sanctions might be re-imposed if Iran violates the deal.

While Iran is not supposed to enrich uranium with its advanced centrifuge­s for 10 years, the deal permits limited “research and developmen­t” of the advanced centrifuge­s, according to the U.S. document. Israeli officials say this means that Iran could immediatel­y put these centrifuge­s into action after the deal expires or breaks down.

They also want Iran “to come clean” about its past nuclear weapons efforts. Iran insists its nuclear program is solely for peaceful purposes, a claim that is widely disputed.

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