Iran is building missiles that could reach New York in three to four years, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the UN on Tuesday, comparing a nuclear Iran to “50 North Koreas.” It comes after Hassan Rouhani launched his “charm offensive.”
“Iran is now building ICBMs that the US says could reach this
city in three or four years,” Netanyahu said, speaking to the
UN General Assembly in New York. He used this argument to bring
the “truth” about Iran into a practical dimension.
Netanyahu accused Iran’s nuclear program of not being peaceful.
“Why would a country with a peaceful nuclear program develop
intercontinental ballistic missiles, whose sole purpose is to
deliver nuclear warheads,” he said.
Netanyahu said he wished he could believe new Iranian President
Hassan Rouhani - who has sought to make progress in nuclear talks
since taking office at the beginning of August - but said he
simply couldn’t do so.
“When it comes to Iran’s nuclear weapons program…Rouhani is a
wolf in sheep's clothing, a wolf who thinks he can pull the wool
over the eyes of the international community,” Netanyahu
declared, demanding that harsh sanctions be imposed on the
country. He predicted that such sanctions would be effective if
accompanied by “a credible military threat.”
He added that “if Israel is forced to stand alone, Israel will
stand alone” in the matter of defending itself.
“The only diplomatic solution that would work,” claimed
Netanyahu , “is one that fully dismantles Iran’s nuclear
weapons program and prevents it from having one in the
future.”
Existing sanctions on Iran have seen unemployment rise to 20
percent, with inflation hovering at over 30 percent, according to
former US Labor Secretary Robert Reich. The US and EU have placed
the country under a total economic embargo, meaning that
Iranian-origin imports are banned and there is almost a complete
US ban on selling aircraft parts to the country.
“These sanctions are violent, pure and simple,” Rouhani said during his speech to the UN General Assembly.
Netanyahu created a four-point plan for imposing a further
"diplomatic solution" on Iran. Firstly, the country would
have to cease all uranium enrichment. Secondly, Iran would be
required to have all stockpiles of enriched uranium removed from
its territory. Thirdly, infrastructure for a nuclear breakout
capability would have to be dismantled. And lastly, all work at
the heavy water reactor in Iraq aimed at the production of
plutonium would have to be stopped.
Rouhani appeared to be somewhat in the limelight at the UN,
addressing the General Assembly twice and doling out interviews
to those who requested them. Iran’s UN presence appeared to set
the context for a breakthrough in relations between Washington
and Tehran. Netanyahu followed this with talks at the White House
on Monday with US President Barack Obama and Secretary of State
John Kerry.
Standing at the podium at the UN on Thursday, Rouhani called for
a conference to create a zone which is free of nuclear weapons or
any weapons of mass destruction in the Middle East without delay.
All countries, he said, should participate in the conference.
He stated that any use of nuclear weapons is a violation against
humanity, adding that “the world has waited too long for
nuclear disarmament.” Rouhani pointed out on September 24
that Israel was the only country in the region that had not yet
signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
‘Have your yellowcake and eat it too’
Netanyahu skipped over the use of props this year, unlike last
year when he brought along the infamous ‘red line’ cartoon
drawing.
On Tuesday - the last day of the General Assembly - Netanyahu
reeled off an impressive repertoire of knowledge regarding Iran’s
national history, going back some 25,000 years, to illustrate his
more recent displeasure with the country.
“The great Persian king Cyrus ended the Babylonian exile of
the Jewish people. He issued a famous edict in which he
proclaimed the right of the Jews to return to the land of
Israel…but in 1979 a radical regime in Iran tried to stamp out
that friendship,” he said, skipping over the intermittent
years and also citing a line from a book written by Rouhani in
2011. He added that a nuclear Iran would be “50 North
Koreas” and commented that “Rouhani thinks he have his
yellowcake and eat it too.”
Yellowcake is milled uranium oxide - a kind of uranium
concentrate powder which is prepared through a variety of
refining methods. It is used in the preparation of uranium fuel
for nuclear reactors.
Iran says its nuclear program addresses its energy and medical
needs, and insists on its right to develop it – a topic which
will be brought up at the next round of high level talks.
The talks will be held in Geneva, Switzerland on October 15-16.
Iran and the six world major powers will participate in what will
be the first nuclear negotiations to take place since the
election of Rouhani, who has urged the world to seize the
opportunity of his election to resolve the nuclear dispute.
Following Netanyahu's speech at the UN, the Iranian ambassador
took the floor in response, telling Israel “don't educate
us,” and adding that it could be Israel that perhaps requires
better education since it didn’t sign the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Rouhani himself later took to Twitter to request that
“Government & Parliament, allow for everyone to freely
express their views within the framework of law and ethics.”