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Iran, Arabs
call for UN action over Israeli nukes
Foreign Desk Report
CAIRO—Iran and Arab states have seized on Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s
statement implying that Israel has nuclear weapons, calling it proof of
a regional threat and demanding UN action. On Monday Olmert appeared to
admit — in breach of the Jewish state’s decades-long policy of ambiguity
— that Israel possessed such weapons.
Iran called his comments a confession and demanded action from the
United Nations. “This confession shows the real threat to security and
stability in the Middle East, and it shows this regime’s evil plans to
carry out threats, a terror strategy and continued occupation,” foreign
ministry spokesman Mohammed Ali Hosseini said Wednesday.
“It is extremely necessary to adopt fast and efficient solutions on the
UN Security Council and the Organisation of the Islamic Conference and
other regional organisations to combat these clear threats,” he said.
Israel, which Iran does not recognise, is Tehran’s arch-foe. It has
repeatedly called for UN action over Iran’s nuclear programme and
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s anti-Israel comments.
The Arab League urged the international community and the Security
Council to exert pressure on Israel “to open its nuclear facilities in a
transparent manner.” “It is essential that Israel comply with
international resolutions,” Mohammed Sobeih, the assistant secretary
general in charge of Palestinian affairs, told reporters in Cairo.
The 22-member body called on “all states which offered assistance to
Israel, particularly on the issues of uranium and heavy water, to speak
out without delay,” he said. “Everyone knows that Israel possesses
weapons of mass destruction which could reach as far as 2,000 kilometres
(1,240 miles), and all Arab capitals are within this range,” Sobeih
added.
On Tuesday the Gulf Cooperation Council — grouping Bahrain, Kuwait,
Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — demanded that
sanctions be imposed on Israel. GCC Secretary General Abderrahman al-Attiya
called on the United States not to apply a policy of “double standards”
and to “work for the application (against Israel) of the resolutions of
international legitimacy and of Chapter VII.”
Chapter VII of the UN charter deals with action the Security Council
might take regarding threats to the peace, breaches of the peace and
acts of aggression. As a first step, it says the council may call for
member states to impose sanctions, including complete or partial
interruption of economic relations and the severance of diplomatic
relations.
If such measures fail, military action can be called for. In a Monday
interview with German television, Olmert listed Israel as a country with
nuclear weapons. “We never threatened any nation with annihilation,” he
said.
“Iran openly, explicitly and publicly threatens to wipe Israel off the
map. Can you say that this is the same level, when they are aspiring to
have nuclear weapons, as France, America, Russia and Israel?” he asked.
Olmert’s spokeswoman Miri Eisin was quick to deny that the premier
admitted Israel had nuclear weapons, saying “Israel will not be the
first country to introduce nuclear weapons to the region.” |