Israel’s defense minister: Iran nuclear deal ‘in ER room’

Israel’s defense minister: Iran nuclear deal ‘in ER room’
Israel’s Defense Minister Benny Gantz’s remarks said echoed those of a senior unnamed Israeli official who predicted the deal would not be signed before the November US elections. (AFP)
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Updated 15 September 2022
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Israel’s defense minister: Iran nuclear deal ‘in ER room’

Israel’s defense minister: Iran nuclear deal ‘in ER room’
  • Israel is not a party to the Vienna-based talks on reinstating the 2015 deal
  • But it threatens to take military action against Iran if it deems diplomacy to be at a dead end

JERUSALEM: Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers is “in the ER room” and is unlikely to be renewed soon, if at all, Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz said on Thursday after European leaders voiced doubt about Tehran’s willingness to revive the pact.
Israel, Iran’s arch-foe, supported the US withdrawal from the accord in 2018 under then-President Donald Trump, who deemed it too limited, and has been advocating against a re-entry into the pact sought by President Joe Biden’s administration.
Iran, whose nuclear ambitions are seen by Israel as an existential threat, denies seeking atomic bombs. Since Trump’s walkout, it has breached the 2015 deal by ramping up uranium enrichment, a process that can create bomb fuel down the line.
“...The Iran nuclear deal seems like it is in the ER room,” Gantz told a conference on counter-terrorism at Reichman University. “There’s a period maybe after the elections, we’ll see how it goes,” he said in an apparent reference to the US mid-term November elections.
His remarks echoed those of a senior unnamed Israeli official on Sunday who predicted the deal would not be signed before the November elections.
Israel is not a party to the Vienna-based talks on reinstating the 2015 deal. But its threats to take military action against Iran if it deems diplomacy to be at a dead end keep Western capitals attentive.
On Saturday, France, Britain and Germany questioned Iran’s commitment to reviving the deal in return for a lifting of sanctions, comments that were rejected by Tehran and called “very untimely” by Moscow.
In August, after 16 months of tortuous negotiations, the European Union laid down a final offer to overcome an impasse over terms for restoring the agreement.
Earlier this month, Iran sent its latest response to the EU’s proposed text. Western diplomats said this was a step backwards, with Iran seeking to link a revival of the deal with the closure of UN nuclear watchdog investigations into unexplained nuclear activity by Tehran.