The world has the military might to prevent Iran from
developing a nuclear weapon, Israel's military chief said in comments published
Tuesday, after Iran pressed President Bush to rule out a nuclear strike against
Tehran.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, right,
listens to Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, who is also Iran's
Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, during meeting in
Tehran, Iran, late Monday May, 1, 2006. Iran denounced the United States
on Monday for contemplating possible nuclear strikes against Iranian
targets and urged the United Nations to take urgent action against what it
called a dangerous violation of international law.
[AP] |
Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz also said that if Iran does obtain nuclear capability, it
will constitute a threat to Israel's existence. When asked if the world can,
militarily, stop Iran's nuclear program, Halutz told the Maariv newspaper: "The
answer is yes."
Asked whether Israel would be involved in such a military operation against
its top enemy, Halutz said, "We are part of the world."
Western nations have been considering tough sanctions ¡ª not yet including
military action ¡ª against Iran if it continues with its program to enrich
uranium, a process that can produce fuel for a nuclear reactor or fissile
material for a bomb. Iran contends it has a right to enrich uranium as long as
it does not attempt to use it for nuclear weapons.
Bush has refused to rule out military action in response to the Iranian
nuclear standoff. When asked last month whether U.S. options regarding Iran
"include the possibility of a nuclear strike" if Tehran refuses to halt uranium
enrichment, Bush replied, "All options are on the table." He stressed, however,
the United States will continue to focus on diplomacy.
In a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan obtained by The Associated Press on Monday, Iran's U.N. Ambassador
Javad Zarif called Bush's refusal to rule out a U.S. nuclear strike on Iran
"illegal and insolent threats."
Zarif said the use of "false pretexts" by senior U.S. officials "to make
public and illegal threats of resort to force against the Islamic Republic of
Iran is continuing unabated in total contempt of international law and
fundamental principles of the
United Nations Charter." The "U.S. aggressive policy" of contemplating the possible use of nuclear
weapons also violates the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and other U.S.
multilateral agreements, he said.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has repeatedly spoken out against
Israel and threatened to wipe it "off the map."
While Israeli government and military officials had been very vocal in
calling for action against Iran, they have toned down their comments in recent
weeks, wishing to take a low profile as the world proceeds in its efforts to
stop the Iranian program.
Officials from the five permanent U.N. Security Council
members gather Tuesday in Paris to discuss International Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei's report to the
council that Iran was in violation of the council's demand that Tehran stop
enriching uranium. The report opened the way for the council to take punitive
measures against Iran, but immediate action is not likely because Russia and
China are opposed to sanctions.
Israel is convinced international efforts against the Iranian program can
help persuade Tehran to back down, Halutz said.
Halutz told Maariv it is not clear if Iran will be able to achieve nuclear
capability by the end of the decade, as Israeli officials had predicted earlier.
But if Iran does one day possess a nuclear weapon, it would constitute a threat
to Israel's existence, Halutz said.
"When the Iranians will have a nuclear, military capability, then we will be
able to talk about an existential threat," Halutz said. "If they have a nuclear
weapon and the rulers speak as they do today, this combination will be a
dangerous combination for Israel."