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Benjamin Netanyahu speech to Congress: What is the Iran nuclear deal that the Israeli Prime Minister is so opposed to?

Netanyahu said deal would leave 'a Middle East littered with nuclear bombs'

David Usborne
Wednesday 04 March 2015 09:36 GMT
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Netanyahu said deal with Iran would leave 'a Middle East littered with nuclear bombs'
Netanyahu said deal with Iran would leave 'a Middle East littered with nuclear bombs' (Reuters/AP)

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Isreali Prime Minister, yesterday warned Congress that the US and its allies were pursuing an arms enforcement deal so weak with Iran that it would all but ensure that it acquires nuclear weapons, catapulting the world into a "nuclear nightmare".

The exact details of the proposed deal remain a tightly guarded secret, but we are able to answer several questions about what we know so far.

Q. What would a new nuclear deal involve?

A. Benjamin Netanyahu’s aim is to stop what appears to be a softening of the US stance on a nuclear Iran, which Israel views as an existential threat. Even as he was addressing Congress yesterday, US officials were in talks with Iran over proposals that could allow Tehran to keep 6,000 enrichment centrifuges and send stockpiles of partially enriched uranium to a third country (probably Russia) for safekeeping, in return for rigorous inspection of its nuclear facilities. Iran says it needs nuclear power to reduce its dependence on oil. America wants to make it impossible for Iran to “break out” from a civilian nuclear programme and build a nuclear bomb within less than a year.

The US wants any deal to last at least 10 years (Getty Images)

Q. What is the main stumbling block?

A. A key obstacle is that the US and most of the five other powers involved (Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China) want any deal to last at least 10 years, with sanctions eased in stages. Iran wants a shorter-term agreement in return for rapid sanctions relief.

Q. What is Russia’s role?

A. Moscow supplies fuel for Iran’s sole power reactor – built by Russian engineers at Bushehr, southern Iran, and completed in 2012 – and is offering to supply Iran’s plants with low-grade nuclear fuel, which is difficult to convert to weapons-grade material. In November, Iran and Russia agreed to build eight more plants; a second is already under way at Bushehr.

Apparently it is recent history, in particular, that President Vladimir Putin wants to brush under the carpet (AP)

Q. When does the clock stop ticking for a deal?

A. All sides are racing to agree broad terms with Iran by the end of this month, before a final July deadline for a detailed agreement. Congressional researchers say Iran’s economy is 20 per cent smaller now than it would have been without sanctions, and one in five Iranians is unemployed.

The Doomsday scenario

If the talks fail, the US would press for more sanctions, further isolating Iran. Meanwhile Israel has threatened a pre-emptive military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Both possibilities would remain if Iran agreed a deal and then reneged on its terms. So, counter to Mr Netanyahu’s argument, a deal appears the best option, not least because a military strike by Israel would make Iran more determined to build a bomb – and potentially to use it against Israel.

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