In Paris, PM Netanyahu says economic forces will 'kill' ‎nuclear deal ‎

Israel's leader urged France on Tuesday to turn its ‎attention to tackling Iran's aggression in the ‎Middle East, saying he no longer needed to convince ‎Paris to quit the 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran, as ‎economic pressure would kill it anyway.‎

Benjamin Netanyahu was in Paris for talks with ‎President Emmanuel Macron as part of a tour to ‎persuade the European signatories to the deal – Britain, France and Germany – to follow Washington's ‎lead in pursuing a tough stance on Iran.‎

U.S. President Donald Trump pulled out of the deal ‎on May 8, saying he planned to reimpose sanctions on ‎Tehran unless it complied with a series of demands ‎touching on its ‎ballistic missile program, its role ‎in Middle East ‎wars or what happens after the deal ‎begins to expire ‎in 2025.‎

The European powers share those concerns but say ‎‎that the accord, also negotiated with China and ‎‎Russia, is the best way to prevent Tehran developing ‎‎a nuclear weapons capability.‎

‎"I didn't ask France to withdraw from the JCPOA ‎‎[Iran deal] because I think it is basically going to ‎be dissolved by the weight of economic forces," ‎Netanyahu told a joint news conference with ‎Macron.‎

‎"If you have a bad deal you don't have to stick to ‎it, especially if you see that Iran is conquering one ‎country after another and you cannot divorce this ‎from Iran's aggression in the region."‎

Israel maintains that Iran duped the West into a ‎‎one-sided deal and plans to use the break from ‎‎sanctions to build up its financial reserves before ‎‎returning to full-scale enrichment of uranium for ‎‎future nuclear weapons.‎ ‎
Last month, Israel exposed the Iranian nuclear ‎archive, proving Tehran has planned to pursue ‎weapons of mass destruction despite its statements ‎to the contrary.‎

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ‎‎announced Monday he has ordered the Atomic Energy ‎‎Organization to increase the country's nuclear ‎‎enrichment capacity if a nuclear deal with world ‎‎powers collapses. The increase detailed by Khamenei ‎‎speech would not exceed limits set by the nuclear ‎‎accord, which European countries have said they hope ‎‎to salvage.‎

The three European powers are scrambling to save the ‎deal as they regard it as the best chance to stop ‎Tehran from developing a nuclear weapon atomic bomb.‎

Macron did not appear receptive to Netanyahu's ‎argument. ‎

‎"I told the prime minister of my deep conviction, ‎which is shared with our European partners, that the ‎accord needs to be preserved to ensure control of ‎nuclear activity," he said.‎

‎"I call on all sides to stabilize the situation and ‎‎not give into escalation which will lead to one ‎‎thing: conflict," Macron said, adding that the ‎‎Iranian statements added to tensions, but were not ‎‎in violation of the nuclear deal.‎

The European powers are trying to come up with a ‎package to ring-fence trade with Iran against ‎renewed U.S. financial sanctions to dissuade Tehran ‎from quitting the accord.‎

But the global reach of the U.S. financial system, ‎forcing companies to choose between two ‎irreconcilable options - selling to Iran or to the ‎vast U.S. market - is driving home the limits of ‎European efforts to create financial mechanisms that ‎could shield revived trade with Tehran.‎
That has left Europe under pressure from Tehran.‎

‎"If Iran does not get the financial guarantees in ‎oil and access to the financial system, then I don't ‎see Iran sticking to the deal because the pressure ‎from [Iranian] hardliners is only increasing," said ‎a Western official.‎

‎"It is quite possible they will resume enrichment ‎capacity and research and development of advanced ‎centrifuges to show the Europeans and the world that ‎they are serious."‎

‎'Israeli intelligence prevents terrorism in France'‎

Also on Tuesday, Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, met ‎with the leaders of France's Jewish community. ‎

Addressing the forum, Netanyahu noted that Israel ‎was regularly sharing intelligence with French ‎security forces to help them fight terrorism.‎

‎"You hear on the news that the French police ‎prevented an attack, but do you asked yourself how ‎they did it and who gave them the information? ‎Israeli intelligence prevents terrible attacks, ‎including here in France. Israel has prevented many ‎terrorist attacks in Europe and we will continue to ‎do so."‎

The prime minister noted that many in Western ‎Europe, and especially in France, fail to realize ‎the extent in which Israel was involved in thwarting ‎the threat of radical Islam.‎

‎"Israel works to counter radical Islam, which poses ‎a threat to Israel and the entire world. Israel is ‎the bulwark against radical Islam. The world knows ‎that may here maybe not enough," he said. ‎

Netanyahu further commended Macron for his ‎unrelenting fight against anti-Semitism in France. ‎

‎"Anti-Semitism in Europe in general and in France in ‎particular is something that has ancient elements ‎but its expressions are new. This is something that ‎we must keep fighting, as a matter of policy," he ‎said. ‎