Panetta asks Israel for patience on Iran

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2012
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U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta looks on during a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, not seen, at the Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2012. Israel's threats to attack Iran and the violence convulsing Syria top the agenda of Panetta's meetings Wednesday with Israeli government leaders.

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta looks on during a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, not seen, at the Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2012. Israel's threats to attack Iran and the violence convulsing Syria top the agenda of Panetta's meetings Wednesday with Israeli government leaders.

— Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Wednesday that U.S. statements of solidarity with Israel and its assurances that military strikes are still an option aren’t working to convince Iran that the West is “serious about stopping them” from developing nuclear weapons.

Standing with a visiting Leon Panetta, Netanyahu dismissed the U.S. defense chief’s counsel to give diplomacy more time to halt Iran’s nuclear program.

“Right now the Iranian regime believes that the international community does not have the will to stop its nuclear program,” Netanyahu said at the prime minister’s residence in Jerusalem. “This must change, and it must change quickly because time to resolve this issue peacefully is running out.”

Earlier Wednesday, at an Israeli defense site south of Tel Aviv, Panetta stood beside Defense Minister Ehud Barak to declare that the Obama administration is serious about the possibility of eventually resorting to military force against Iran. But he said all non-military measures must be exhausted first.

Barak sounded as unconvinced as the prime minister, saying he appreciated U.S. support but added that the probability of international sanctions ever compelling Iran to give up its nuclear program is “extremely low.”

Netanyahu’s and Barack’s statements, taken together, dramatized the growing strains in U.S.-Israeli relations over what strategy to pursue with Iran.

Tehran has said repeatedly that its nuclear work is for civilian energy uses only, but suspicions that the Islamic republic will use enriched uranium for nuclear weapons have resulted in international sanctions and saber-rattling from Israel, which perceives a nuclear Iran as an existential threat. The United States has discouraged Israel from a unilateral, pre-emptive military strike on Iran.

Panetta on Wednesday said repeatedly that “all options,” including military force, are on the table to stop Iran, should sanctions and diplomacy — the preferred means of persuasion — ultimately fail.

He said he still hopes Iran will see that negotiations are the best way out of this crisis.

However, Panetta said, “If they continue and if they proceed with a nuclear weapon ... we have options that we are prepared to implement to ensure that that does not happen.”

Netanhayu for his part, has said repeatedly that if necessary he will order military action against Iran even if Washington objects. Panetta said in his appearance with Barak that he understands that Israel must make such important decisions on its own terms.

“Their effort to decide what is in their national security interest is something that must be left up to the Israelis,” Panetta said.

The Panetta visit to Israel comes just days after U.S. Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney met with top Israeli officials about Iran and other issues and said that if he becomes president, he will “honor” whatever Israel decides to do about Iran’s nuclear capabilities. Romney has accused the Obama administration of being too soft on Iran and of not providing sufficient support to Israel.

In greeting Panetta Wednesday at Israeli defense headquarters, Barak said, “The defense ties between Israel and the United States are stronger and tighter than they have ever been and the credit now has to go, most of it, to you, Leon.”

Panetta responded: “We are a friend, we are a partner, we have, as the defense minister has pointed out, probably the strongest U.S.-Israel defense relationship that we have had in history. What we are doing, working together, is an indication not only of our friendship but of our alliance to work together to try to preserve peace in the future.”

Netanyahu told Israeli Channel 2 TV on Tuesday that despite reservations about an Iranian attack among former Israeli security officials and Israel’s current army chief, the country’s political leadership would make the final decision on any attack.

“I see an ayatollah regime that declares what it has championed: to destroy us,” Netanyahu said. “It’s working to destroy us, it’s preparing nuclear weapons to destroy us. ... If it is up to me, I won’t let that happen.”

With “matters that have to do with our destiny, with our very existence, we do not put our faith in the hands of others, even our best of friends,” Netanyahu said, hinting that Israel might act alone despite American misgivings.

Netanyahu said both Romney and Obama have said “Israel has the right to defend itself.”

Barak took Panetta on a trip Wednesday to inspect and get briefed on an Israeli air defense system known as Iron Dome. It is designed to shoot down short-range rockets and artillery shells such as those that have been fired into the Jewish state in recent years from Islamic militants linked to Iran and based in southern Lebanon and the Gaza Strip.

Obama last week announced he was releasing an additional $70 million in military aid for Israel, a previously announced aid commitment that appeared timed to upstage Romney’s trip to Israel. The stepped-up U.S. aid, first announced in May, will go to help Israel expand production of the Iron Dome system.

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(18)
donnaw
Aug 3, 2012 at 7:18 a.m.
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tt...you should stick to sports!

woody
Aug 2, 2012 at 1:24 p.m.
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Rmoney talkes about Palistine Culture, then he FLIP FLOPS and goes into deny mode, THEN he FLIP FLOPS AGAIN, all within a few days! No wonder they call him Mitt the Twit. See for your self.
.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mix3yZ8hf...

woody
Aug 2, 2012 at 1:10 p.m.
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liar liar pants on fire !!!!!

tthompson
Aug 2, 2012 at 11:38 a.m.
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'I wouldn't care how much vacation Obama took if...'

Ha. NO ONE is gonna believe that Donna.

donnaw
Aug 2, 2012 at 10:13 a.m.
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gannie....I wouldn't care how much vacation Obama took if the economy was better, Iran wasn't threatening the world with nuclear devastation, the debt was not so alarming, the unemployment rate was lower and someone brokered a real peace in Afghanistan and Syria. It's called leadership!!!

woody
Aug 2, 2012 at 8:56 a.m.
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Once again donna, it's obvious your watching the wrong media station. OF COURSE fox news is more interested in stuff like Obama's tennis shoe size than mainstream news. I have heard quite a bit about Panetta and what he has been doing for this administration. He has been doing quite well cleaning up what Bush started...thank you.

donnaw
Aug 2, 2012 at 7:08 a.m.
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woody...This article is about the situation in Israel. Panera works for Obama administration. Obama is the president and should be leading our discussion on how to deal with the Israel/Iran comflict. All we have heard lately is all the fund raising and campaigning he is doing. Where is his leadership?

woody
Aug 1, 2012 at 7:39 p.m.
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Sure, lets get another trigger happy repub to start some wars because it seems that's all they can do.

woody
Aug 1, 2012 at 7:36 p.m.
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donna...talking about docking pay, lets start with Walker and Ryan and their trips to see the Koch bros. Then lets talk about Rmoney that spent more time outside his state than he did in it. All you talk about is Obama but your side offends the worse. The rich are never guilty, is that it?

Ezoner
Aug 1, 2012 at 11:44 a.m.
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Obama does not support and will not support our allies. He believes that pandering to our enemies solve the problems. What he doesnt realize, or maybe he does and doesnt care, is that he is being used. Iran will quickly become Germany -- look back a few years and see what the Gemrnas did. The Isrealis will not let that happen -- nor should they.

donnaw
Aug 1, 2012 at 10:40 a.m.
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The Obama administration wants Israel to wait until after the election to take any action against Iran so that he doesn't have to quit campaigning all over the country to come home and do his job. His pay should be docked for every day he is out of Washington. He surely has used up all his vacation days for all the time he has taken off.

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