|
Home | News | Archive| RSS
twitter | facebook
|
| Payvand Iran News ... |
|
|
04/02/09
|
|
|
|
|
Netanyahu Prepared To Go It Alone On Iran
|
|
By Kristin Deasy, RFE/RL
In an
exclusive interview on March 31 with "The Atlantic,"
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Israel could go it alone and
attack Iran if the country went nuclear.
Netanyahu told Jeffrey Goldberg that if "the wide-eyed believer gets hold of the
reins of power and the weapons of mass death, then the entire world should start
worrying."
Should the Iranian government -- a "messianic apocalyptic cult," Netanyahu told
Goldberg -- control atomic bombs, Israel does not need U.S. approval to launch
an attack. One Netanyahu adviser told "The Atlantic" that the "problem [with
attacking Iran] is not military capability."
Netanyahu's comments came days after an
article by Seymour Hersh appeared in "The New Yorker" with
reports that former Vice President Dick Cheney privately told the Israelis that
Obama was "pro-Palestinian" and might not support their policies.
Reactions to the interview have been mixed: CBS's Tucker Reals
can't decide if Netanyahu is bluffing.
In "The Atlantic" piece, Goldberg admits the threat may be a "tremendous" bluff
but that as former commandoes, Netanyahu and Company are "men predisposed to
action."
Reals calls the conversation "an interesting preview" of new dialogue between
Washington and Israel.
"Haaretz's" Aluf Benn is more skeptical, citing experts in
Israel's security-strategic community who think an attack against Iran is "too
big a mission for Israel" and that sending in an air force requires U.S.
cooperation.
Over at Talking Points Memo, M.J. Rosenberg
writes that, "Obama needs to get on the phone and let
Netanyahu know" that "Israel cannot act unilaterally."
Kaveh L Afrasiabi, author of "After Khomeini: New Directions in Iran's Foreign
Policy,"
writes in Asia Times that Israel's position "muddies"
Obama's promised "new beginning" with Iran.
And former Israeli diplomat Zvi Shtauber, speaking at Harvard University, said
that he thought Israel would only consider an attack when Iran was
"within the striking distance" of nuclear capability.
Copyright (c) 2009 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
... Payvand News - 04/02/09 ... --
|
© Copyright 2009 NetNative
(All Rights Reserved) |
|
Join Payvand's Facebook Page
|