U.S. and Israel ramp up pressure on Iran as diplomacy stalls
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[December 10, 2021]
By Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The United States and
Israel increased pressure on Iran on Thursday as nuclear talks stalled,
with Israel's visiting defense chief raising the issue of joint military
readiness to be able to halt Iran's nuclear aspirations, if necessary.
Reuters exclusively reported that Thursday's U.S.-Israeli agenda
was expected to include discussions about possible military exercises
that would prepare for a worst-case scenario to destroy Iran's nuclear
facilities should diplomacy fail and if their nations' leaders request
it.
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said at the start of the meeting
with his Israeli counterpart, Benny Gantz, that Iran had failed to offer
constructive diplomatic engagement in talks that President Joe Biden had
hoped would revive a 2015 nuclear deal abandoned by his predecessor,
Donald Trump.
Austin said Biden was "prepared to turn to other options" if the current
American policy on Iran fails.
"We are completely aligned in our commitment to preventing Iran from
obtaining a nuclear weapon. This is a national security interest of the
United States and Israel and the world," Austin said.
Gantz described Iran, Israel's arch foe, as "the biggest threat to the
global and regional peace and stability." After meeting Austin, he held
talks with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons, saying it wants to master nuclear
technology for peaceful purposes. But sweeping demands by Iran's new,
hardline government in talks have heightening suspicions in the West
that Iran is playing for time while advancing its nuclear program.
With the 2015 deal's nuclear benefits now badly compromised, some
Western officials say there is little time left before the foundation of
the deal is damaged beyond repair. Under the accord, Iran curbed its
nuclear program in return for relief from economic sanctions.
DETERRENCE
The Pentagon declined comment on the Reuters report, which also
disclosed an Oct. 25 briefing by Defense Department officials to U.S.
National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan on the full range of military
options to ensure that Iran would not be able to produce a nuclear
weapon.
"I know there's interest in a certain Reuters report," Pentagon
spokesman John Kirby told a news briefing.
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U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin welcomes Israel's Defense
Minister Benny Gantz during an enhanced honor cordon arrival
ceremony at the Pentagon, in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., December 9,
2021. REUTERS/Ken Cedeno
"I will tell you this: We routinely conduct exercises and training
with our Israeli counterparts and I have nothing to announce to or
speak to or point to or speculate about today."
State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters he would not
want to "speak to contingency planning" if diplomacy isn't viable in
the short term.
Drills by the United States and Israel could address calls by Dennis
Ross, a former senior U.S. official and Middle East expert, and
others to signal openly to Tehran that the United States and Israel
remain serious about preventing it from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
"Biden needs to disabuse Iran of the notion that Washington will not
act militarily and will stop Israel from doing so," Ross wrote last
month.
Ross also suggested the United States could signal a willingness to
give the Israelis the U.S. military's bunker-busting Massive
Ordnance Penetrator, a 30,000-pound (13,600-kg)bomb.
Central Intelligence Agency Director Bill Burns said on Monday that
the CIA does not believe Iran's supreme leader has decided to take
steps to weaponize a nuclear device but noted advances in its
ability to enrich uranium, one pathway to the fissile material for a
bomb.
Burns cautioned that, even if Iran decided to go ahead, it would
still require a lot of work to weaponize that fissile material
before attaching a nuclear weapon to a missile or other delivery
system.
"But they're further along in their mastery of the nuclear fuel
cycle and that's the kind of knowledge that is very difficult to
sanction away or make disappear," he said.
U.S. officials have also long worried about America's ability to
detect and destroy dispersed components of Iran's nuclear
weaponization program once enough fissile material for a bomb were
produced.
(Additional reporting by Idrees Ali and Daphne Psaledakis; Editing
by Mary Milliken and Daniel Wallis)
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