Israel to get US briefing on Iran nuclear talks

Israel to get US briefing on Iran nuclear talks

JERUSALEM - Agence France-Presse
Israel to get US briefing on Iran nuclear talks

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at the weekly cabinet meeting at his Jerusalem office on Sunday, Oct. October 2013. AP photo

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday world pressure on Iran must be maintained, as an Israeli delegation travelled to Washington to be briefed on talks on Iran's nuclear programme.
 
Israel has been alarmed by the mounting emphasis on diplomacy with the new Iranian government of President Hassan Rouhani to allay concerns about Tehran's nuclear ambitions, fearing that Western governments may ease crippling sanctions before securing any real policy change.
 
"As long as we don't see actions but only words, the international pressure must continue and increase," Netanyahu said.
 
He said that the greater the pressure on Iran, "the higher the chance its military nuclear programme will be dismantled." The Israeli premier also warned of legitimising what he called Tehran's "rogue regime". Netanyahu's remarks came as a senior Israeli delegation was on its way to Washington for updates on talks between the major powers and Iran over its nuclear programme which resumed in Geneva on Tuesday.
 
Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz and a team of officials from intelligence services and the foreign and defence ministries were to participate in the bi-annual strategic dialogue, a statement from his office said.
 
"This year the dialogue will focus on the nuclear talks with Iran and other regional issues," it said of the meetings which are the "central forum" for deepening bilateral cooperation and coordination over issues in the region.
 
Ahead of the visit, a senior Israeli official was briefed by the US as well as a British delegation to the Iran talks, which flew in to update the Israelis, the Haaretz newspaper reported.
 
French and German officials also briefed their Israeli counterparts by phone on the substance of the Geneva talks, the paper said.
 
Israel, which has the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear arsenal, has repeatedly threatened to take unilateral action if necessary to keep Iran from developing the capability to build a bomb of its own.