Panetta: US force an option against Iran nukes
Israeli Defense minister Ehud Barak, left, and U.S. Defense Secretary
Leon Panetta, right, meet in Tel Aviv, Israel, Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2012.
Israel's threats to attack Iran and the violence convulsing Syria top
the agenda of Panetta's meetings Wednesday with Israeli government
leaders.
(AP Photo/Gali Tibbon, Pool)
By
Robert Burns
AP National Security Writer
/
August 1, 2012
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ASHKELON, Israel—U.S.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Wednesday that Iran must either
negotiate acceptable limits on its nuclear program or face the
possibility of U.S. military action to stop it from getting the bomb.
Panetta
made his remarks outside the city of Ashkelon in southern Israel, with
an "Iron Dome" anti-rocket defense system as a backdrop.
The
Pentagon chief said repeatedly that "all options," including military
force, are on the table to stop Iran, should sanctions and diplomacy --
the preferred means of persuasion -- ultimately fail.
He said he still hopes Iran will see that negotiations are the best way out of this crisis.
However,
Panetta said, "If they continue and if they proceed with a nuclear
weapon, ... we have options that we are prepared to implement to ensure
that that does not happen."
Israeli
Defense Minister Ehud Barak, standing beside Panetta, said he sees an
"extremely low" probability that sanctions will ever compel Iran to give
up its nuclear activities.
Barak
said Israel "has something to lose" by waiting for sanctions and
diplomacy to run their course because Iran is continually accumulating
enriched uranium as the key ingredient for a nuclear bomb.
Iran
says its nuclear work is for civilian energy uses, but suspicions that
the Islamic republic will use enriched uranium for nuclear weapons have
resulted in international sanctions and saber-rattling from Israel,
which perceives a nuclear Iran as an existential threat. The United
States has discouraged Israel from a unilateral, pre-emptive military
strike on Iran, but has said it would keep all options available.
The
Panetta visit with his Israeli counterpart comes just days after U.S.
Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney met with top Israeli
officials about Iran and other issues. Romney has accused the Obama
administration of being too soft on Iran and not providing sufficient
support to Israel.
In
greeting Panetta Wednesday at Israeli defense headquarters, Barak said,
"The defense ties between Israel and the United States are stronger and
tighter than they have ever been and the credit now has to go, most of
it, to you, Leon."
Panetta
responded: "We are a friend, we are a partner, we have, as the defense
minister has pointed out, probably the strongest U.S.-Israel defense
relationship that we have had in history. What we are doing, working
together, is an indication not only of our friendship but of our
alliance to work together to try to preserve peace in the future."
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was scheduled to meet later Wednesday
with Panetta, told Israeli Channel 2 TV on Tuesday that despite
reservations about an Iranian attack among former Israeli security
officials and Israel's current army chief, the country's political
leadership would make the final decision on any attack.
"I
see an ayatollah regime that declares what it has championed: to
destroy us," Netanyahu said. "It's working to destroy us, it's preparing
nuclear weapons to destroy us. ... If it is up to me, I won't let that
happen."
With "matters that
have to do with our destiny, with our very existence, we do not put our
faith in the hands of others, even our best of friends," Netanyahu said,
hinting that Israel might act alone despite American misgivings.
Netanyahu said both Romney and Obama have said "Israel has the right to defend itself."
The
trip to Ashkelon on Wednesday gave Panetta a chance to inspect and get
briefed on an Israeli air defense system known as Iron Dome. It is
designed to shoot down short-range rockets and artillery shells such as
those that have been fired into the Jewish state in recent years from
Islamic militants linked to Iran and based in southern Lebanon and the
Gaza Strip.
Obama last week
announced he was releasing an additional $70 million in military aid for
Israel, a previously announced move that appeared timed to upstage
Romney's trip to Israel. The stepped-up U.S. aid, first announced in
May, will go to help Israel expand production of the Iron Dome system.
The
Panetta visit to Israel comes at a critical time, with the U.S.
considering more direct involvement in Syria's civil war and weighing
its course on Iran.
Panetta
acknowledged Monday that international sanctions have not pressured
Tehran to give up its nuclear ambitions. But the Obama administration
thinks tougher sanctions eventually will compel Iran to submit and it
doesn't want Israel to attack prematurely.
------
Associated Press writers Amy Teibel and Daniel Estrin in contributed to this report.
end quote from:
http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2012/08/01/iran_syria_top_panettas_agenda_in_israel/
end quote from:
http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2012/08/01/iran_syria_top_panettas_agenda_in_israel/
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