Press TV- The Israeli regime, emboldened by an especially anti-Iran White House, has started repeating threats of military action against the Islamic Republic over its nuclear program.
On Thursday, Israels Transportation and Intelligence MinisterYisrael Katzsaid that the Tel Aviv regime would take military action against Iran if attempts led by the Trump administration to stop Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon did not succeed.
Iran has consistently said that it is not seeking to build atomic weaponsand has put its nuclear program under a most intrusive international monitoring regime as part of a deal with six other countries.
If international efforts led these days by US President Trump dont help stop Iran attaining nuclear capabilities, Israel will act militarily by itself, he said in the Japanese capital of Tokyo, where he was to lobby Japanese officials against Iran.
He was apparently referring to US administration attempts to have the terms of the international nuclear deal with Iran changed.
Katzsaid Tel Aviv wanted tighter conditions to be imposed on Irans nuclear program under a revision of the deal.
In an October 13 speech, Trump said he would not certify that Iran is complying with the accord under an American law. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the institution formally tasked with the job of certifying Iranian compliance, says Iran is compliant. Trump also threatened that he might ultimately terminate the deal.
Katz said he had asked the Tokyo government to support steps led by Trump to change the 2015 nuclear agreement between Iran and six world powers. Asian economic powerhouse Japan had earlier announced support for the Iran deal.
Israeli threats of military action against Iran then subsided. But, while the Tel Aviv regime even seemed to have capitulated to the reality of the deal at one point, it remained zealously opposed to it.
Trumps rise to the presidency in January 2017, however, seemed to have given Israel new cause for hope.
Ex-CIA chief backs selling bunker-busters to Iran, but with conditions
Separately, an American spy chief toldThe Jerusalem Post on Thursday that Tel Aviv should be permitted to buy bunker-buster bombs from the US to deter Iran.
Ive talked about that thought... I can imagine circumstances where the US might want to take steps to convince Iran of its seriousness, said Michael Hayden, a former director of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)and National Security Agency (NSA).
Allowing Israel to purchase them (bunker-busters) in gradations, training on them, but keeping them here (in the US) could be some of those steps, he said.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="555"] Michael Hayden, a former director of the USs Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the National Security Agency (NSA) (photo by AFP)[/caption]
Hayden said, however, that certain restrictions had to be imposed on the Israeli purchases, with Washington maintaining a check on Israels use of the weapons.
Otherwise, he warned, Israel might be more aggressive and pull us into something we do not want to be pulled into.