Netanyahu Allocates Almost $3 Billion for Iran Attack
Newsmax
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon have reportedly ordered the military to
continue preparing for a possible strike on Iran's nuclear facilities.
Three Knesset members who were present at Knesset
joint committee hearings on Israel Defense Forces plans said that at
least 10 billion shekels ($2.89 billion) of the defense budget would be
allocated this year for preparations for the strike on Iran, the Israeli
newspaper Haaretz reported.
After an interim accord between Iran and six
world powers was reached, Netanyahu stressed that Israel will not
consider itself bound by it. Netanyahu in fact is again making implied
threats about a possible unilateral Israeli strike.
"My friends, I believe that letting Iran enrich
uranium would open up the floodgates," Netanyahu said at the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee conference in Washington earlier this
month. "That must not happen. And we will make sure it does not happen."
Ya'alon said in a recent speech at Tel Aviv
University that he is now likely to back a unilateral strike on Iran in
light of his assessment that the Obama administration will not do so,
according to Haaretz.
"We think the United States should be the one
leading the campaign against Iran," he said. "But the U.S. has entered
talks with them and unfortunately, in the haggling in the Persian
bazaar, the Iranians were better.
"Therefore on this matter we have to behave as though we have nobody to look out for us but ourselves."
The second round of nuclear talks opened in Vienna on Tuesday
with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in attendance along
with senior diplomats from the six powers — the United States, United
Kingdom, France, Russia, China, and Germany.
Zarif wrote in an opinion piece for Britain's
Financial Times that the six powers have agreed to seek a "mutually
acceptable agreement" after realizing that "coercion, pressure and
sanctions only result in more centrifuges, more resentment and deeper
mistrust."
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