OMG! LOL!!! IRAN-LAUSANNE-YEMEN: NEW AXIS OF EVIL?!?
Jewish neurotic paranoia reaching new heights…
Source: Ynet
The developing agreement on Iran’s nuclear program is even worse
than Israel had feared and the “Iran-Lausanne-Yemen axis” must be
stopped, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday, even as reports
emerged of possible progress in the ongoing talks in Switzerland between
Iran and the world powers.
“I have just come from a conversation with US Senate Republican
leader Mitch McConnell. Over the weekend I spoke with US Senate
Democratic leader Harry Reid. I heard from both of them about strong and
continuing bipartisan support for Israel and of course this is very
important. I expressed to them our deep concern over the agreement being
formulated with Iran in the nuclear talks. This agreement, as it
appears, confirms all of our concerns and even more so,” Netanyahu told
his cabinet in Jerusalem as the sides in Lausanne worked toward a March
31 deadline.
“Even as meetings proceed on this dangerous agreement, Iran’s
proxies in Yemen are overrunning large sections of that country and are
attempting to seize control of the strategic Bab-el-Mandeb straits which
would affect the naval balance and the global oil supply.
“After the Beirut-Damascus-Baghdad axis, Iran is carrying out a
pincers movement in the south as well in order to take over and conquer
the entire Middle East. The Iran-Lausanne-Yemen axis is very dangerous
for humanity and needs to be stopped,” he said, drawing a line between
Iran’s nuclear ambitions and the actions of the Iranian-allied Houthi
rebels in Yemen.
Netanyahu has been a vehement opponent of the agreement currently
being brokered, even stating his case in a fiery pre-election speech to
congress earlier this month that did nothing to ease tense ties between
Israel and the Obama administration.
Iran has tentatively agreed to limits centrifuges used to enrich
uranium to 6,000 – or even less – at its main site, in apparent progress
in nuclear talks, officials told the Associated Press on Sunday, two
days ahead of a target date for an initial nuclear agreement.
Iran has also agreed to ship out all enriched uranium it produces –
which can be used to make the fissile core of a nuclear weapon – to
Russia, the officials said.
Meanwhile, US Secretary of State John Kerry cancelled plans to fly
to Boston for a ceremony in honor of his late friend Edward Kennedy in
order to stay in Switzerland, where nuclear talks between Iran and six
world powers are ongoing.
Officials close to the talks also confirmed the French and German
foreign ministers, Laurent Fabius and Frank-Walter Steinmeier, had
cancelled a planned joint trip to Kazakhstan.
“We’re hopeful, but there is still a lot of work to be done,” Fabius told reporters on Sunday.
Iran denies charges from the West and Israel that it wants to build a
nuclear weapon, and says its program is purely peaceful. It wants the
removal of international sanctions that are hurting its economy.
The six world powers negotiating with it are seeking a halt to its
most sensitive nuclear work. The dispute dates back more than a decade
and has threatened at times to trigger a new Middle East war.
Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif have been in
Lausanne for days to try to reach a preliminary deal by a self-imposed
deadline of Tuesday. They held several rounds of talks on Saturday and
met again on Sunday morning.
Fabius and Steinmeier joined the talks on Saturday, and their
counterparts from China, Britain and Russia were to take part later on
Sunday.
Close as the sides have come to the outline of an agreement, they
still have deep disagreements on Iran’s demands for uranium enrichment
research and the immediate removal of all UN and key US and European
Union sanctions. Those disagreements could wreck a deal, officials say.
Zarif says the six powers are now the ones who must compromise.
“In negotiations, both sides must show flexibility,” Zarif said on
Twitter. “We have, and are ready to make a good deal for all. We await
our counterparts’ readiness.”
Western officials close to the talks said it was up to Iran to compromise on the remaining sticking points.
“The serious but difficult work continues,” a senior US State
Department official said. “We expect the pace to intensify as we assess
if an understanding is possible.”
Israel meanwhile kept up its public campaign against the possible nuclear deal with Tehran.
“I say here, this morning, in the name of the government of Israel,
this is a bad deal, full of holes,” Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval
Steinitz told Israel Radio.
A key point in the framework accord the sides are trying to seal by
Tuesday is expected to be the duration of the agreement, which officials
from the six-power group said would have to be in place for more than
10 years. Additional problems remain on monitoring Tehran’s compliance
and other issues.
The framework accord should be followed by a comprehensive deal by June 30 that includes full technical details.”
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