The Palm Beach Post

Israel claims proof of secret Iran nuke plans

Allegation might sway Trump to pull U.S. out of Iran deal.

- By Amy Teibel and David Wainer

JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country has half a ton of Iranian documents that prove Tehran had a secret program to build nuclear bombs, a claim that could help tip Pres- ident Donald Trump’s hand when he decides whether to pull the U.S. out of the Iran nuclear deal.

“Iran lied about never having a nuclear weapons program,” Netanyahu said in a news conference in the government’s defense compound in Tel Aviv. “After signing the nuclear deal in 2015, Iran intensifie­d its efforts to hide its nuclear files.”

Israel uncovered 55,000 pages of material on a weapons program that operated between 1999 and 2003 codenamed Project Amad, he said, pulling back a curtain to reveal shelves filled with what appeared to be binders and compact discs of informatio­n. He said the nuclear program continued after it was subsumed under a different guise.

Netanyahu spoke less than two weeks before Trump is to decide whether the U.S. will pull out of the internatio­nal agreement between Iran and six world powers that curbed Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief. The accord lifts restrictio­ns on Tehran’s nuclear activities beginning in 2025, and Trump has warned that he would withdraw from the pact unless it was revised to bar Iran from ever developing atomic weapons.

Netanyahu said Israel has shared the informatio­n it has obtained with the U.S., and that he was sure Trump would “do the right thing” when he decides on May 12 whether to remain in the nuclear accord. The U.S. has verified the material as authentic, said a person familiar with the matter.

“These files conclusive­ly prove that Iran is brazenly lying when it says it never had a nuclear weapons program,” Netanyahu said.

Trump’s new secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, made it clear while visiting Jerusalem on Sunday that the U.S. leader would insist on changes to the accord.

“President Trump’s been pretty clear. This deal is very flawed,” Pompeo said during a joint appearance with Netanyahu. “He’s directed the administra­tion to try and fix it, and if we can’t fix it, he’s going to withdraw from the deal. It’s pretty straightfo­rward.”

Netanyahu made his announceme­nt as rising tensions between Iran and Israel have been stoking fears that the two Middle Eastern powers are headed for a military showdown in Syria.

Iran denies it is developing a nuclear weapon and says its nuclear program is for energy and medical purposes. United Nations nuclear inspectors have reported 10 straight times that Iran has capped its most sensitive nuclear work that could be used to develop a bomb. The Vienna-based Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency ended a 12-year probe in December 2015 into the possible military dimensions of Iran’s past atomic work.

“Iran is subject to the world’s most robust nuclear verificati­on regime,” IAEA Chief Coordinato­r Cornel Feruta told diplomats on April 23 in Geneva. The agency captures hundreds of thousands of images daily and analyzes millions of sources of opensource data each month, he said.

Israel hasn’t been pacified by these reports and continues to see Iran’s nuclear ambitions as a threat to its survival. Having failed to sway the U.S. from concluding the signature foreign-policy initiative of then-President Barack Obama, it has found a more receptive ear in the Trump administra­tion, which has set a May 12 deadline for the U.S. and Europe to address issues that aren’t covered in the nuclear pact.

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 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY / ABACA PRESS ?? “These files conclusive­ly prove that Iran is brazenly lying when it says it never had a nuclear weapons program,” Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu says.
OLIVIER DOULIERY / ABACA PRESS “These files conclusive­ly prove that Iran is brazenly lying when it says it never had a nuclear weapons program,” Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu says.

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