uranium enrichment – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Tue, 02 Sep 2025 15:09:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg uranium enrichment – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 Iran's suspicious moves: Is it bracing for an Israeli strike? https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/09/02/irans-suspicious-moves-is-it-bracing-for-an-israeli-strike/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/09/02/irans-suspicious-moves-is-it-bracing-for-an-israeli-strike/#respond Tue, 02 Sep 2025 13:39:47 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1085275 Iran has evacuated and scattered cooling systems (chillers) that were installed at the Natanz uranium enrichment facility, a step that may suggest it is preparing for the possibility of a renewed attack on the site that was bombed by Israel and the US during the war. The disclosure was made on Monday by American nuclear expert […]

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Iran has evacuated and scattered cooling systems (chillers) that were installed at the Natanz uranium enrichment facility, a step that may suggest it is preparing for the possibility of a renewed attack on the site that was bombed by Israel and the US during the war. The disclosure was made on Monday by American nuclear expert and president of the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) David Albright, who promised to publish the images shortly.

New satellite imagery of the Natanz enrichment plant shows that Iran has in last week removed and dispersed nearly all of the "chillers" from the two HVAC buildings at the Fuel Enrichment Plant at Natanz," Albright wrote in a post on X.

Albright, one of the leading experts on the Iranian nuclear issue, explained that the Iranians are utilizing the interim period when the facility is not operational. "The purpose of this removal and dispersal being that they are of high value, and since there is no electric power due to the Israeli bombings, and the centrifuges are currently inoperable, this is a tactic to make the chillers less vulnerable to future aerial bombardment in the interim."

He stated that some of the chillers were positioned on helicopter landing pads, others were relocated to the water purification facility area, and the remainder were scattered in various places throughout the complex. This, in light of the fact that the US exploited the ventilation systems of the Fordo nuclear site in its effort to compromise the underground enrichment halls beneath the mountain when it bombed the site with B-2 aircraft.

New vehicle tracks and dirt piles over underground centrifuge buildings at Natanz enrichment facility, southeast of Tehran after airstrikes on June 15, 2025 (AFP PHOTO / © 2025 PLANET LABS PBC)

Natanz, situated approximately 250 kilometers (155 miles) south of Tehran, formed the core of the Iranian nuclear program with around 18,000 centrifuges. The Israeli and American strikes inflicted severe damage on the facility. The International Atomic Energy Agency assessed at the war's outset that the impact on the surface facilities disabled the power grid and damaged the centrifuges in the subterranean halls. Subsequent American attacks later struck these halls directly.

The hurried evacuation at Natanz is taking place amid the escalating nuclear crisis. Since the war began, Iran has denied access to inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency who sought to visit the attacked facilities. This denial was a key factor that prompted Britain, France, and Germany last week to trigger the "snapback" mechanism, which will reimpose international sanctions within 30 days.

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Report: Israel, US pondering 'additional strikes' on Iran as intel shows partial success https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/07/17/report-following-mixed-results-israel-us-pondering-additional-strikes-on-iran/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/07/17/report-following-mixed-results-israel-us-pondering-additional-strikes-on-iran/#respond Thu, 17 Jul 2025 09:46:34 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1073765 A fresh US intelligence evaluation has determined that American airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities achieved only partial success, with one of three targeted enrichment sites suffering complete destruction while the remaining two facilities sustained damage that may permit nuclear enrichment activities to resume within several months, according to five current and former US officials familiar […]

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A fresh US intelligence evaluation has determined that American airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities achieved only partial success, with one of three targeted enrichment sites suffering complete destruction while the remaining two facilities sustained damage that may permit nuclear enrichment activities to resume within several months, according to five current and former US officials familiar with the assessment who spoke to NBC News.

The evaluation, which forms part of the Trump administration's continuing efforts to assess Iran's nuclear program status following the facility strikes, was presented to certain US legislators, Defense Department personnel and allied nations in recent days, four of those sources confirmed to NBC News.

NBC News has also discovered that US Central Command had formulated a far more extensive plan to attack Iran that would have involved targeting three additional locations in an operation spanning several weeks rather than a single evening, according to one current US official and two former US officials.

President Donald Trump received briefings on that comprehensive plan, but it was ultimately rejected because it conflicted with his foreign policy instincts to withdraw the United States from international conflicts rather than deepen involvement, along with the potential for significant casualties on both sides, one current official and one former official explained to NBC News.

The impact of the strike by US forces on Fordo on June 22, 2025 (AP)

"We were willing to go all the way in our options, but the president did not want to," one source with knowledge of the plan stated.

In remarks delivered in the hours following the strikes, Trump characterized the attacks he authorized as "a spectacular military success" and declared, "Iran's key enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated."

The actual situation as determined through intelligence gathering appears more complex. Should the preliminary findings regarding the damage inflicted on Iran's nuclear program prove accurate as additional intelligence emerges, the United States might find itself returning to conflict in the region.

Discussions have taken place within both American and Israeli governments regarding whether additional strikes on the two less-damaged facilities might be required if Iran fails to agree soon to restart negotiations with the Trump administration on a nuclear agreement or if signs emerge that Iran is attempting to rebuild at those locations, one current official and one former official told NBC News. Iran has consistently maintained its nuclear program serves purely peaceful, civilian purposes.

The recent assessment represents a current snapshot of the damage US strikes caused amid an intelligence-collection process that administration officials have indicated will continue for months. Evaluations of Iran's nuclear program following the US strikes are anticipated to evolve over time, and according to two current officials, as the process advances, the findings suggest greater damage than previous assessments indicated. That assessment remains the current understanding of the strikes' impact, officials confirmed to NBC News.

"As the President has said and experts have verified, Operation Midnight Hammer totally obliterated Iran's nuclear capabilities," White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly told NBC News in a statement. "America and the world are safer, thanks to his decisive action."

In his own statement, chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell declared to NBC News: "The credibility of the Fake News Media is similar to that of the current state of the Iranian nuclear facilities: destroyed, in the dirt, and will take years to recover. President Trump was clear and the American people understand: Iran's nuclear facilities in Fordow, Isfahan, and Natanz were completely and totally obliterated. There is no doubt about that."

He added, "Operation Midnight Hammer was a significant blow to Iran's nuclear capabilities thanks to the decisive action of President Trump and the bravery of every man and woman in uniform who supported this mission."

Destruction and deterrence

The US strikes targeted three enrichment facilities in Iran: Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan. US officials believe the assault on Fordo, which has long been considered a critical element of Iran's nuclear ambitions, succeeded in setting back Iranian enrichment capabilities at that location by as much as two years, according to two current officials who spoke to NBC News.

Netanyahu gifting President Donald Trump a mezuzah in the shape of a B-2, which was used by the US to bomb Fordo, on July 7, 2025 (GPO

Much of the administration's public communications about the strikes has concentrated on Fordo. In a Pentagon briefing conducted in response to reporting on an initial Defense Intelligence Agency assessment that concluded Iran's nuclear program had been delayed by only three to six months, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke extensively about the Fordo strike but not the attacks at Natanz and Isfahan.

US officials knew prior to the airstrikes that Iran possessed structures and enriched uranium at Natanz and Isfahan that were likely beyond the reach of even America's 30,000-pound (13,600-kilogram) GBU-57 "bunker buster" bombs, three sources told NBC News. Those bombs, which had never been deployed in combat before the strikes, were designed specifically with the deeply buried facilities carved into mountain sides at Fordo in mind.

As early as 2023, however, indications emerged that Iran was constructing tunnels at Natanz that extended below where the GBU-57 could penetrate. Deep underground tunnels also exist at Isfahan. The United States struck surface targets at Isfahan with Tomahawk missiles and did not deploy GBU-57s there, but utilized them at Natanz.

White House officials directed NBC News to a closed-door briefing conducted in late June by CIA Director John Ratcliffe, who informed lawmakers that Iran's nuclear program was "severely damaged" and that several key nuclear facilities were "completely destroyed," according to an administration official's description of the briefing provided to NBC News. Ratcliffe stated the only metal conversion facility at Natanz, required for nuclear enrichment, was destroyed to the point that it would take "years to rebuild," according to a White House official authorized to describe portions of the classified briefing.

Ratcliffe also indicated that the intelligence community believes the strikes buried the vast majority of enriched uranium at Isfahan and Fordo and that therefore it would be extremely difficult for the Iranians to extract it to resume enrichment, according to the official who spoke to NBC News. The United States has not observed indications that Iran is attempting to excavate the facilities, two officials confirmed.

As NBC News has reported, the Israeli government believes at least some of Iran's highly enriched uranium remains intact but buried beneath the Isfahan facility, according to a senior Israeli government official who briefed reporters in Washington last week. The official stated, however, that Israel considers the material effectively unreachable, because it is monitoring and will conduct new strikes if it believes Iran is attempting to dig up the uranium. The official also indicated Israel believes Iran's nuclear program has been set back by up to two years.

Similarly, even if the targeted Iranian nuclear sites were not completely destroyed, US officials and Republican supporters of the operation consider it successful because it has altered the strategic equation for Iran. From their perspective, the regime in Tehran now faces a credible threat of additional airstrikes if Israel and the United States believe it is attempting to revive clandestine nuclear work.

Asked late last month whether he would consider bombing Iran again if intelligence reports concluded Iran can enrich uranium at a level that concerns him, Trump responded: "Sure. Without question. Absolutely."

Iran's air defenses have been largely eliminated, making it virtually impossible for Iran to defend against further strikes on facilities in the future, the White House official stated to NBC News.

"It was made clear that Iran no longer has any more [air defenses], so the idea that they can easily rebuild anything is ludicrous," the White House official said.

The 'all-in' plan

Beginning during the Biden administration, as early as last fall and continuing into this spring, Army Gen. Erik Kurilla, the head of US Central Command, had developed a plan to go "all-in" on striking Iran, according to a current US official and two former officials who spoke to NBC News. That option was designed to "truly decimate" Iran's nuclear capabilities, in the words of one former official.

Iranian flags fly as fire and smoke at Sharan Oil depot rise, following Israeli strikes on Iran, in Tehran, Iran, June 15, 2025 (Majid Asgaripour/WANA/Reuters)

Under the plan, the United States would have struck six sites. The reasoning was that the six sites would need to be hit repeatedly to inflict the kind of damage necessary to completely end the program, people familiar with the thinking told NBC News. The plan would also have involved targeting more of Iran's air defense and ballistic missile capabilities, and planners projected it could result in a high number of Iranian casualties. US officials expected that if that were to occur, Iran would target American positions, for example in Iraq and Syria, a person familiar with the plan explained to NBC News.

"It would be a protracted air campaign," the person said.

Some Trump administration officials believed a deeper offensive option against Iran was a viable policy, two former officials told NBC News.

Trump was briefed on the so-called all-in plan, but it was ultimately rejected because it would have required a sustained period of conflict.

The history

During his first term, in 2018, Trump withdrew the United States from a 2015 nuclear agreement between Iran and world powers that was negotiated during the Obama administration. The agreement, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, imposed strict limitations on Iran's nuclear program in exchange for an easing of economic sanctions.

Rescue personnel work at an impact site following missile attack from Iran on Israel, in centra Israel, June 14, 2025 (Reuters / Ronen Zvulun)

Under the deal, Iran was a year away from obtaining enough fissile material for a nuclear bomb. After Trump withdrew from the accord and reimposed sanctions, Iran violated restrictions on its uranium enrichment. Before the June airstrikes, the regime had enough fissile material for about nine to 10 bombs, according to US officials and United Nations inspectors who spoke to NBC News.

Trump has since sought a new agreement with Iran that would prevent it from developing nuclear weapons. Indirect talks between US and Iranian officials failed to secure a deal before Israel launched airstrikes on Iran's nuclear facilities.

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Khamenei calls US nuclear demands 'outrageous' amid talks' uncertainty https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/05/20/khamenei-calls-us-nuclear-demands-outrageous-amid-talks-uncertainty/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/05/20/khamenei-calls-us-nuclear-demands-outrageous-amid-talks-uncertainty/#respond Tue, 20 May 2025 09:36:45 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1059981 Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has characterized American demands regarding Tehran's uranium enrichment as "excessive and outrageous," according to state media reports. "I don't think nuclear talks with the US will bring results. I don't know what will happen," Khamenei stated. The Supreme Leader emphasized that Washington should avoid making what he described as […]

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Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has characterized American demands regarding Tehran's uranium enrichment as "excessive and outrageous," according to state media reports.

"I don't think nuclear talks with the US will bring results. I don't know what will happen," Khamenei stated. The Supreme Leader emphasized that Washington should avoid making what he described as unreasonable demands during the diplomatic process that has shown increasing signs of strain.

US envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi (EPA)

Anticipated discussions that might have constituted a fifth round of negotiations possibly scheduled for the weekend in Rome appear increasingly uncertain, Reuters reported. The diplomatic efforts have encountered substantial obstacles as Iranian and American representatives clash specifically over uranium enrichment policies.

Tehran's Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-Ravanchi expressed on Monday that diplomatic efforts would collapse if Washington continues insisting that Iran abandon domestic uranium enrichment – an activity that American officials contend could potentially lead to nuclear weapons development.

The Islamic Republic maintains that its nuclear energy program serves exclusively peaceful purposes.Earlier on Tuesday, another Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister, Kazem Gharibabadi, indicated that Tehran had received and was currently examining a proposal from the United States. This development follows US President Donald Trump's warning last week that Tehran needed to "move quickly or something bad is going to happen."

The US president has issued multiple warnings that Iran would face bombing campaigns and severe sanctions if it failed to reach a compromise regarding its disputed nuclear program.

During his initial 2017-21 presidential term, Trump withdrew the United States from a 2015 agreement between Iran and world powers that established strict limitations on Tehran's enrichment activities in exchange for international sanctions relief, as detailed by Reuters.

Trump, who characterized the 2015 agreement as disproportionately favorable to Iran, also reimplemented comprehensive US sanctions against the country. The Islamic Republic responded to these measures by intensifying its uranium enrichment activities.

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Preparing for action in Iran? IAF practices strikes on distant targets https://www.israelhayom.com/2024/06/27/preparing-for-action-in-iran-iaf-practices-strikes-on-distant-targets/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2024/06/27/preparing-for-action-in-iran-iaf-practices-strikes-on-distant-targets/#respond Thu, 27 Jun 2024 12:05:53 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=968547   The Israeli Air Force has been conducting extensive training exercises simulating long-range strikes on distant targets, potentially in preparation for action against Iran. These drills come amid growing concerns that Tehran is exploiting Israel's current focus on the war against the Hamas terrorist organization in the Gaza Strip as well as against Hezbollah in […]

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The Israeli Air Force has been conducting extensive training exercises simulating long-range strikes on distant targets, potentially in preparation for action against Iran. These drills come amid growing concerns that Tehran is exploiting Israel's current focus on the war against the Hamas terrorist organization in the Gaza Strip as well as against Hezbollah in Lebanon to accelerate its nuclear program.

According to reports obtained by Israel Hayom, the IAF has carried out several such exercises in recent weeks. These drills involve long-distance flights and operational activities targeting remote locations, incorporating refueling aircraft, transport planes, and additional units to prepare for potential operations in Iran.

The heightened focus on Iran stems from intelligence assessments suggesting Tehran is making "alarming and unprecedented" progress toward a military nuclear capability. This development has raised concerns within the security establishment, prompting the creation of an Iran department within the Air Force's operational headquarters during the ongoing war.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, in a recent meeting with US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, emphasized the urgency of the situation, stating, "Now is the time to fulfill the commitment made by all recent US administrations: preventing a nuclear Iran – time is running out on this issue."

Israeli defense officials have long maintained that once Iran makes the decision, it could potentially enrich enough uranium for several nuclear facilities within a short timeframe, possibly as little as a month. However, for years, Israel had diverted resources from Iran-focused preparations to other defense priorities. It was only about two years ago that funding began to shift back toward readiness for operations in the "third circle" – a term often used to refer to Iran.

While Israel is enhancing its preparedness, there is an acknowledgment within the country that its ability to prevent an Iranian nuclear program is limited compared to that of the United States. As a result, the IAF is refining its plans while hoping that American intervention will ultimately deter Iran's nuclear ambitions.

The International Atomic Energy Agency has condemned Iran's lack of cooperation, to which Tehran responded by announcing an increase in the number of centrifuges at its Fordo and Natanz facilities, effectively planning to boost its enriched uranium stockpile.

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Israel could accept US-Iran nuclear 'understanding', senior MK says https://www.israelhayom.com/2023/06/18/israel-could-accept-us-iran-nuclear-understanding-senior-lawmaker-says/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2023/06/18/israel-could-accept-us-iran-nuclear-understanding-senior-lawmaker-says/#respond Sun, 18 Jun 2023 05:46:14 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=892791   Israel could find acceptable an understanding between its arch-foe Iran and the United States if it includes rigorous supervision of Tehran's nuclear program, a senior lawmaker said in comments aired on Saturday. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram According to Iranian and Western officials, Israel's main ally Washington is holding talks with […]

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Israel could find acceptable an understanding between its arch-foe Iran and the United States if it includes rigorous supervision of Tehran's nuclear program, a senior lawmaker said in comments aired on Saturday.

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According to Iranian and Western officials, Israel's main ally Washington is holding talks with Iran to sketch out steps that could include limiting the Iranian nuclear program.

These steps would be cast as an "understanding" rather than an agreement requiring review by the US Congress, such as the 2015 accord abandoned in 2018 by then-President Donald Trump.

"It's not a wide-scope agreement, it's more like a small agreement, a memorandum of understanding, an MOU, and I think Israel can live with this if there is real supervision," Yuli Edelstein, head of the Israeli parliament's Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee, told media.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office declined to comment on whether fellow Likud party member Edelstein's remarks reflected the views of the premier.

On Tuesday, before briefing the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, Netanyahu said in televised remarks, "Our position is clear. No agreement with Iran would obligate Israel, which will do everything required to defend itself.

"Our opposition to the deal – a return to the original deal – is working. But there are still differences in outlook, and we do not hide these, regarding smaller agreements too. We have been stating our position clearly, both in closed and open sessions," Netanyahu said.

Uranium enrichment

A core element of the possible understanding which remains unclear is the degree to which Iran would agree to rein in its uranium enrichment. Israeli officials in Netanyahu's circle have given potentially differing views on the issue this month.

Netanyahu's national security adviser, Tzachi Hanegbi, said Israel didn't see as much "damage" in any new understanding as there was in the 2015 deal, but it was "poised" for any Iranian shift to more than 60% fissile purity.

"That would already be a clear acknowledgment that the uranium enrichment is for weapons needs," Hanegbi told Israel Hayom Friday, referring to the 90% fissile purity required for a bomb.

But last week, Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, who accompanied Hanegbi to Washington talks about Iran, voiced misgivings about any "freeze" of current enrichment levels.

"It means that you reconcile with a higher level of enrichment in Iran. And we thought that was a bad idea then, and we think it's a bad idea today," he told the AJC Global Forum in Tel Aviv.

Having failed to revive the 2015 deal, US President Joe Biden's administration hopes to restore some limits on Iran to keep it from getting a nuclear weapon that could threaten Israel and trigger a regional arms race.

The US government has dismissed reports it is seeking an interim deal with Tehran, which denies seeking the bomb.

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Iran: Nuclear monitoring deal over, IAEA will have no access to images of sites https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/05/23/iran-nuclear-monitoring-deal-over-iaea-will-have-no-access-to-images-of-sites/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/05/23/iran-nuclear-monitoring-deal-over-iaea-will-have-no-access-to-images-of-sites/#respond Sun, 23 May 2021 06:14:04 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=631303   Iran's parliament speaker said on Sunday that a three-month monitoring deal between Tehran and the U.N. nuclear watchdog had expired as of Saturday, Iran's state TV reported, adding that the agency would no longer access images of nuclear sites. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency […]

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Iran's parliament speaker said on Sunday that a three-month monitoring deal between Tehran and the U.N. nuclear watchdog had expired as of Saturday, Iran's state TV reported, adding that the agency would no longer access images of nuclear sites.

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The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Grossi, is to hold a news conference on Sunday afternoon. He is in talks with Iran on extending the monitoring arrangement with Tehran that could affect talks between Tehran and six powers to revive the 2015 nuclear deal, the IAEA said.

"From May 22 and with the end of the three-month agreement, the agency will have no access to data collected by cameras inside the nuclear facilities agreed under the agreement," state TV quoted Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf as saying. Iran began gradually breaching terms of the pact with world powers after then-President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the deal in 2018 and reimposed sanctions.

"Yesterday it was discussed and the decision was made. The law passed by the parliament will be implemented. The supreme leader has underlined the importance of this issue, as well," Qalibaf said.

The pact aims to keep Iran from being able to make nuclear arms, which Tehran says it has never wanted to build.

In February, the watchdog and Iran agreed to keep "necessary" IAEA monitoring and verification activities in the Islamic Republic, although Tehran would reduce cooperation with the agency, including by ending snap inspections.

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Iran threatens to shut off IAEA cameras at nuclear sites https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/02/21/iran-threatens-to-shut-off-iaea-cameras-at-nuclear-sites/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/02/21/iran-threatens-to-shut-off-iaea-cameras-at-nuclear-sites/#respond Sun, 21 Feb 2021 15:35:41 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=590869   The head of the United Nations' nuclear watchdog met Sunday with Iranian officials in a bid to preserve his inspectors' ability to monitor Tehran's atomic program, even as authorities said they planned to cut off surveillance cameras at those sites. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter Rafael Grossi's arrival in Tehran comes as […]

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The head of the United Nations' nuclear watchdog met Sunday with Iranian officials in a bid to preserve his inspectors' ability to monitor Tehran's atomic program, even as authorities said they planned to cut off surveillance cameras at those sites.

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Rafael Grossi's arrival in Tehran comes as Iran tries to pressure Europe and the new Biden administration into returning to the 2015 nuclear deal, which former US President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew America from in 2018.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, who under President Hassan Rouhani helped reach the nuclear deal, said the cameras of the International Atomic Energy Agency would be shut off despite Grossi's visit to follow a law passed by parliament.

"This is not a deadline for the world. This is not an ultimatum," Zarif told the government-run, English-language broadcaster Press TV in an interview aired before he was to meet Grossi. "This is an internal domestic issue between the parliament and the government."

"We have a democracy. We are supposed to implement the laws of the country. And the parliament adopted legislation – whether we like it or not."

Zarif's comments marked the highest-level acknowledgement yet of what Iran planned to do when it stopped following the so-called "Additional Protocol," a confidential agreement between Tehran and the IAEA reached as part of the nuclear deal. The IAEA has additional protocols with a number of countries it monitors.

Under the protocol with Iran, the IAEA "collects and analyzes hundreds of thousands of images captured daily by its sophisticated surveillance cameras," the agency said in 2017. The agency also said then that it had placed "2,000 tamper-proof seals on nuclear material and equipment."

In his interview, Zarif said authorities would be "required by law not to provide the tapes of those cameras." It wasn't immediately clear if that also meant the cameras would be turned off entirely as Zarif called that a "technical decision, that's not a political decision."

"The IAEA certainly will not get footage from those cameras," Zarif said.

The Vienna-based IAEA did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Zarif's comments. The agency last week said the visit was aimed at finding "a mutually agreeable solution for the IAEA to continue essential verification activities in the country."

There are 18 nuclear facilities and nine other locations in Iran under IAEA safeguards.

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Grossi met earlier Sunday with Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of Iran's civilian nuclear program. Iran's ambassador to the IAEA, Kazem Gharibabadi, later tweeted that "Iran and the IAEA held fruitful discussions based on mutual respect, the result of which will be released this evening."

Iran's parliament in December approved a bill that would suspend part of UN inspections of its nuclear facilities if European signatories do not provide relief from oil and banking sanctions by Tuesday.

Already, Iran has slowly walked away from all the nuclear deal's limitations on its stockpile of uranium and has begun enriching up 20%, a technical step away from weapons-grade levels. It also has begun spinning advanced centrifuges barred by the deal, which saw Iran limit its program in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.

An escalating series of incidents since Trump's withdrawal has threatened the wider Middle East. Over a year ago, a US drone strike killed a top Iranian general, causing Tehran to later launch ballistic missiles that wounded dozens of American troops in Iraq.

A mysterious explosion also struck Iran's Natanz nuclear facility, which Iran has described as sabotage. In November, Iranian scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who founded the country's military nuclear program some two decades earlier, was killed in an attack Tehran blames on Israel.

Zarif brought up the attacks in his interview with state TV, saying the IAEA must keep some of its information confidential for safety reasons.

"Some of them may have security ramifications for Iran, whose peaceful nuclear sites have been attacked," Zarif said. "For a country whose nuclear scientists have been murdered in terrorist operations in the past – and now recently with Mr. Fakhrizadeh – confidentiality is essential."

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'No nuclear weapons for Iran', US, E3 pledge https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/02/19/no-nuclear-weapons-for-iran-us-e3-pledge/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/02/19/no-nuclear-weapons-for-iran-us-e3-pledge/#respond Fri, 19 Feb 2021 06:21:18 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=590041   US Secretary of State Antony Blinken held a virtual meeting Thursday with the foreign ministers of Britain, Germany, and France, known as the E3, to discuss Iran and the nuclear deal. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter The leaders agreed that Tehran's decision to limit the International Atomic Energy Agency's access to its […]

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US Secretary of State Antony Blinken held a virtual meeting Thursday with the foreign ministers of Britain, Germany, and France, known as the E3, to discuss Iran and the nuclear deal.

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The leaders agreed that Tehran's decision to limit the International Atomic Energy Agency's access to its nuclear sites is a "dangerous step" and called on the regime to weigh the consequences of such a decision, especially at a time of a renewed diplomatic opportunity. They also warned Iran not to take any additional steps in developing its nuclear capabilities.

E3 ministers expressed their concerns over Iran's most recent production of uranium enriched up to 20%.

"These activities have no credible civil justification," the US Department of State published in a release after the meeting. "Uranium metal production is a key step in the development of a nuclear weapon," it said.

The statement also said that Washington is open to resuming negotiations with Tehran about rejoining the original 2015 nuclear agreement. The US withdrew from the deal under the Trump administration in 2018.

The diplomats pledged to uphold the nuclear non-proliferation regime and ensure that Iran never develops a nuclear weapon. "The JCPOA was a key achievement of multilateral diplomacy," the statement said.

"The E3 welcomed the United States' stated intention to return to diplomacy with Iran as well as the resumption of a confident and in-depth dialogue between the E3 and the United States." The leaders confirmed a strong interest in continuing to cooperate.

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Biden: US will not lift Iran sanctions to restart nuclear talks https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/02/07/biden-us-will-not-lift-iran-sanctions-to-restart-nuclear-talks/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/02/07/biden-us-will-not-lift-iran-sanctions-to-restart-nuclear-talks/#respond Sun, 07 Feb 2021 16:04:17 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=585699   The US will not lift sanctions against Iran unless the Tehran regime stops its uranium enrichment, US President Joe Biden told CBS Evening News in an interview slated to air ahead of Sunday's Super Bowl. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter Interviewer Norah O'Donnell asked Biden point-blank if the US intended to remove […]

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The US will not lift sanctions against Iran unless the Tehran regime stops its uranium enrichment, US President Joe Biden told CBS Evening News in an interview slated to air ahead of Sunday's Super Bowl.

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Interviewer Norah O'Donnell asked Biden point-blank if the US intended to remove sanctions currently in place as a tactic to bring Iran "back to the negotiating table," and Biden responded simply, "no."

When O'Donnell asked the president if any return to negotiations would be contingent on Iran stopping its nuclear enrichment, Biden nodded "yes."

The interview highlight was made public hours after Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said that the US had to lift all sanctions before Iran would consider returning to its commitments under the 2015 nuclear deal, from which former US President Donald Trump withdrew in 2018.

Khamenei's televised comments were his first since Biden was inaugurated on Jan. 20.

"If they want Iran to return to its commitments, the US must lift all sanctions in practice, then we will do verification and see if the sanctions were lifted correctly, then we will return to our commitments," Khamenei told state TV.

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The battle against the bomb https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/01/15/the-battle-against-the-bomb/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/01/15/the-battle-against-the-bomb/#respond Fri, 15 Jan 2021 10:30:43 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=578045   A few weeks ago, the IDF held a closed-door meeting in which Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi issued ordered to prepare a new operational plan to "handle" Iran's nuclear weapons program. Actually, not a single plan, but three options, to be prepared soon and presented to the top political echelon. The background […]

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A few weeks ago, the IDF held a closed-door meeting in which Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi issued ordered to prepare a new operational plan to "handle" Iran's nuclear weapons program. Actually, not a single plan, but three options, to be prepared soon and presented to the top political echelon.

The background is clear: Iran's nuclear program is at a critical junction, and it has three choices. The first one, which it would prefer, would be to return to the 2015 nuclear deal in its original form in exchange for a full removal of US sanctions. The second, which appears more realistic, would be to strike a temporary, partial deal with the US under which Iran would freeze any progress on its nuclear program in exchange for certain easements to the sanctions, especially those that affect its oil industry. The third, which is most worrying to Israel, would be for Iran to make the breakthrough to a nuclear weapon.

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This week, Defense Minister Benny Gantz told us that "In the past few years, Iran has made advances in research and development, both in terms of amassing enriched material and in terms of offensive capabilities, and it has a regime that truly wants nuclear weapons."

According to Gantz, "It's clear that Israel needs to have a military option. That demands resources and investment, and I'm working to ensure that happens."

The aforementioned nuclear deal, or Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) was signed in July 2015 between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council (US, Russia, China, Britain, and France), as well as Germany (a group known as P5+1). The deal marked the apex of a controversial diplomatic move that the Obama administration spearheaded, which caused an open rift with Israel. The crux of the dispute was the correct way to deal with Iran. The US thought that a deal that would take a major part of Iran's capabilities away from it, put oversight in place, and instate long-term restrictions was the right way forward. Israel thought that the only way was to bring Iran to its knees by putting such heavy pressure on the regime that the leadership would have to give up on nukes if it wanted to stay in power.

Iran agreed to a series of steps designed to keep it away from developing a nuclear bomb. The main ones were entirely forgoing its stores of uranium enriched to 20% and a reducing its stocks of low-level enriched uranium (3.67%) to some 300 kg. (661 pounds). Iran also promised to reduce by two-thirds the number of centrifuges only operate first-generation models. Iran agreed not to enrich uranium at its Fordo facility near Qom, which was secretly built under a mountain and is considered a serious challenge because of its underground location, which largely protects it from attacks.

Iran has a number of other obligations under the deal. One major one is to agree to closer oversight by IAEA inspectors than that to which it had been subject to prior to the deal. In exchange, the deal allowed it to resume selling oil on the international market and use global trade platforms. Gradually, sanctions applied to Iranian organizations and individuals were to be removed.

Even at the time the deal was presented, Israel pointed out its many holes. One of the biggest was its end date, or "sunset," as professionals called it – 10 to 15 years later, after which Iran would have been able to do nearly anything it wanted. There would no longer be any restrictions to the amount of uranium it could enrich, the extent to which it could be enriched, the number of centrifuges in use, or its research and development processes. The deal only partly restricted R & D and did not even address two other major issues: Iran's massive ballistic missile program, and its destructive influence on the Middle East resulting from its policy of "exporting" the Islamic Revolution.

Laying down paths for Biden

Many in Israel think that The deep disagreement between former President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which developed into a real rift, made it more difficult for Israel to secure a better deal. This still reverberates today. Nearly everyone interviewed for this article, both on and off the record, said explicitly that Israel should quickly lay out paths to the administration of US President-elect Joe Biden to make sure that any future deal rectifies the mistakes of the past.

This job will likely be handed to Mossad head Yossi Cohen. Netanyahu has already made it clear that he intendeds to appoint someone to head Israel's efforts against Iran, apart from the work that goes on in the National Security Council and the Defense Ministry. Cohen, who in June will finish a five-and-a-half-year term as head of the Mossad, would be a natural choice for the job, and not only because he is so close to Netanyahu. He is well-versed on the Iranian issue and led the battle against an Iranian nuclear bomb in his years as Mossad leader. What's more, he is very well-respected in Washington and it is likely that as an experienced agency director, he will find a way to work with the new administration.

This week, Cohen visited Washington. He was photographed at a local café with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. A day later, Pompeo divulged the deep links between Iran and al-Qaida, whose senior leaders are welcomed in Tehran. In August 2020, al-Qaida No. 2 Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, who was behind attacks against US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, was taken out in a targeted killing. According to foreign reports, the Mossad carried out the killing at the request of the Americans.

Mossad director Yossi Cohen is well-versed on Iran, and can be expected to liaise with the new administration in Washington (Gideon Markowicz) Gideon Markowicz

That killing was apparently more proof of the deep security ties between the Trump administration and Israel. Cohen was a key player on that axis, along with Israeli Ambassador to the US Ron Dermer, and of course, Netanyahu. In their eyes, their biggest achievement was convincing the outgoing president to withdraw from the "bad, dangerous nuclear deal," as they called it, and then place Iran under paralyzing sanctions as part of a "maximum pressure" campaign.

Institute for National Security Studies director Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin tells Israel Hayom that "Israel and the Americans had three hopes. The first, that the regime would collapse as a result of the sanctions and the economic pressure. The second, that the regime would panic and join a new, better deal, and third, that Iran would make a major mistake, like trying to make a breakthrough toward a bomb, and then the US would attack it."

None of these hopes materialized. Two years ago, Yadlin assessed that "the Iranians won't be suckers," as he put it. He said at the time that the regime wouldn't fall, they wouldn't want a different deal, and they certainly wouldn't make mistake that would end things for them. What will happen? "The Iranians are traders. They will try to get the maximum now, in exchange for the minimum on their part," he says.

From patience to resistance

The time that has passed since Iran pulled out of the nuclear deal can be divided into two parts. The first, from May 2018-May 2019, researchers are calling "strategic patience." Iran sat back and for the most part did nothing. It tried to accept the sanctions, worked with Europe in an attempt to develop ways of getting around them, and mostly counted down the clock, hoping Trump would not be reelected.

"That year, Iran discovered that it was paying a heavier economic price than it thought it would," says Dr. Raz Zimmt, an INSS researcher and Iran expert. "They were surprised by the sharp drop in their oil exports (from 2.5 million barrels to 500,000), and mostly by the fact that Europe really couldn't, and possibly didn't want, to help them."

As a result, Iran changed its policies and in May 2019 moved to a "strategy of resistance." First, it began carrying out unusual actions in the Persian Gulf, which began with an on American oil tankers and shooting down an advanced US drone, and peaked with attacks on a Saudi oil facility. That attack, which was perpetrated using cruise missiles and UAVs, was a great success for Iran. Both the damage caused to Saudi Arabia and the fact that the attack went unanswered whet the Iranians' appetite. The person behind most of these actions was the former head of the country's elite Quds Force, Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani. He paid in the price in early January, 2020, when he was killed in a US drone strike shortly after arriving in Baghdad. That killing was the most significant deterrent action the Trump administration carried out in its four years, and most likely the administration's greatest contribution to regional security, along with the agreements to normalize relations between Israel and a number of Arab and Muslim countries.

When it came to the nuclear issue, Washington was less successful. As Iran's activities in the region became increasingly audacious, they began moving away from their obligations under the nuclear deal. They did not withdraw, but they took steps designed to serve them in two ways: collecting assets in anticipation of renewed negotiations with the US and the other world powers, and moving ahead toward a nuclear bomb should those negotiations fail.

The IAEA documented Iran's violations of the agreement and even published them. Iran announced many of them itself in an attempt to deter the west and bring it back to the original deal.

The most egregious violations included enriching uranium behind 3.67% to 4.5%, and amassing much more than it was allowed under the deal – nearly three tons; installing advanced centrifuges in its Natanz and Fordo facilities (and at Fordo they were banned from enriching uranium entirely); expediting research and development on even more advanced centrifuges; and, last week, renewed uranium enrichment to 20%, in total violation of the agreement.

'The weapons group'

To produce a nuclear warhead, Iran would need 1,400 kg. (3,086 pounds) of low-level enriched uranium (3.5%). This undergoes further enrichment to 20%, 220 kg. (485 pounds) of which are required for a nuclear bomb. The third stage would be high level, military-grade enrichment to 90%, and 40 kg. (88 pounds) of 90% enriched uranium are needed for each bomb.

The enrichment mostly takes place at Natanz, and now Fordo. Both facilities use old, IR1 centrifuges. At Natanz, newer centrifuges (IR2+4) have also been installed. Iran is also making progress on more advanced centrifuges (IR6), despite the damage done to the Fordo complex some six months ago in an attack attributed to the Mossad. The advanced centrifuges are expected to allow Iran to enrich more uranium in less time, and thereby cut down on the time it will take it to build a nuclear bomb.

Iran currently has enough low-level enriched uranium (about three tons) to create two bombs. The processes of enriching to the mid and higher levels takes time, and even when it has enough high-level enriched uranium, there are still a number of steps to a weapons system that Iran has yet to complete.

The person responsible for producing the weapons was Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who was killed in Tehran last November – according to foreign reports, by the Mossad. Fakhrizadeh was responsible for what was known as the "weapons group," the final and critical step in assembling a nuclear weapon and making it operational.

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Iran swore it had shut down the weapons group in 2003, when it was still part of the "axis of evil," along with Iraq and North Korea. After the Americans invaded Iraq, the Iranians were afraid they'd be next. A trove of evidence collected since then indicates that it's doubtful the weapons group was ever closed down, and that Iran certainly hadn't revealed the truth about what it had achieved prior to that date. The nuclear archive, which the Mossad smuggled out of Tehran in 2008 and brought to Israel, shed light on the processes and activities Iran had been secretly pursuing, and the extent of its progress in a number of fields – primarily, the weapons group. Israel shared the information from the archive with world powers and the heads of the IAEA, to prove that Iran had lied, was still hiding things, and could not be trusted in the future.

Former IAIA deputy director general for safeguards Olli Heinonen tells Israel Hayom that investigations into the matter are ongoing.

"There are questions that remain open. We must ascertain that all Iran's capabilities have been destroyed or taken away, and later on instate a system of close oversight that will guarantee inspectors direct and immediate access to all [Iranian] facilities and scientists," Heinonen says.

A shortcut to the breakthrough

Israel and the west are worried by what is happening in Iran. The main question is whether or not it has some secret program that western intelligence agencies don't know about, or a secret facility where work is underway to shorten Iran's path to a bomb, whenever it decides to move ahead. Most scientists and researchers think this is not the case.

"We don't have a full, updated picture about Iran's current nuclear program and its plans for the future," Heinonen admits. "The burden is on its shoulders to prove that it really wants peace, but we need to make sure of that through effective oversight measures."

In an article published on the INSS website last week, Yadlin and Ephraim Asculai, a former member of the Israel Atomic Energy Commission, ask the key question of just how far Iran is from building a nuclear bomb. They agree that the decision to start enriching uranium to 20% was meant to serve as a bargaining chip it could forgo in future negotiations, but will also serve to cut down the "breakout time" from the moment Iran decides it wants a bomb to the time it has one.

Breakout time is critical because it is a window in which Iran can activate all its avenues of pressure, from diplomatic and PR moves to economic activity, and even a military offensive. This is exactly what Gantz means when he talks about the need for an available, reliable military option against Iran, and that is what Kochavi meant when he ordered the IDF to prepare one.

Outgoing head of the IDF Military Intelligence Directorate Brig. Gen. Dror Shalom puts Iran's breakout time at two years. Yadlin and Asculai wonder how that could be possible if Iran has already collected enriched uranium and even installed more advanced centrifuges than it used to have. Their answer: some of the advanced centrifuges were installed but have not yet been filled with uranium gas. Mostly, they say, the time to an Iranian bomb should not be calculated strictly according to its amounts of enriched uranium, but also based on the development of a weapons system, particularly the mechanism.

INSS head Maj. Gen. (res.) Amos Yadlin says "the Iranians won't be suckers" (KOKO, file) KOKO

"A nuclear weapons requires three main elements: fissile material, a weapons system, and a platform to carry the bomb," Yadlin and Asculai say. "Iran already has a platform, missiles that can carry a nuclear weapons, and it can produce fissile material by enriching uranium supposedly for civil purposes, but can be used for dual purposes, including a bomb," they explain.

The questions pertain to the weapons system. If Iran really hasn't worked on one since 2003, it has a long way to go to a bomb. But if it has managed to dupe the world and make progress in secret and develop the system, calculations of breakout time need to be adjusted.

Yadlin and Asculai look at three hypotheses of when Iran will achieve its first nuclear bomb. All of which rest on the underlying assumption that Iran is taking shortcuts, and has no secret enrichment program that the west doesn't know about.

According the worst scenario, Iran has already developed most of the elements of the weapons system in secret and they could be completed within three months, and Iran has enough centrifuges to enrich enough uranium for the core of one bomb in that time period. The conclusion: from the moment a decision is made to break out, Iran can develop a bomb in four to six months.

A more reasonable scenario suggests that work on the weapons system is not complete and will take another six months. Since Iran still hasn't activated advanced centrifuges and will need time to install them, the process of enrichment will take more time. In this case, it would take Iran eight months to a year to develop a nuclear bomb.

In the least severe scenario, Iran has been very careful not to touch the subject in recent years for fear of having to pay a heavy price, and would need about a year and a half to finish a weapons system. This scenario, which researchers say depends on the intelligence view that Iran has not worked on a weapons system since 2003, puts the time for Iran to develop a nuclear bomb at two years.

Obama's mistake

In closed-door talks, Netanyahu, Gantz, Kochavi, and Cohen take an uncompromising stance on Iran, and do not believe a word the regime says.

"In the years since the nuclear deal was signed, everyone realized that Iran has been lying the entire time," a senior defense official told Israel Hayom this week. "It was exposed in the nuclear archive and a bunch of other things Iran tried to hide, and of course by its regional terrorist activity, and at the very least demands great caution to ensure it won't lie again in the future."

According to Kochavi, the west shouldn't think of Iran in terms of 10-15 years, but 50 years or more. If that doesn't happen, eh says, we will wake up one morning to an Iran free of almost all restrictions and the ability to work on a nuclear bomb without any interference.

Officials in Israel think that the Obama administration's mistake was treating the Iranian nuclear issue like a sprint in which it had to invest the maximum effort and finish quickly. It's debatable to what extent efforts the administration invested were "maximum," and also the way in which it did so, originally hidin from Israel and its partners its contact with Iran, then acting with incomprehensible stubbornness and panic. But the error was thinking of the process as a sprint rather than a marathon. The Iranians think in terms of eternity.

"Supreme Leader Khamenei has already realized he likely won't live to see a nuclear bomb," another senior defense official told Israel Hayom. "Still, it's his life's mission, and he won't give up on it. Anyone here who thinks that in Iran there is a camp that supports nuclear weapons and a camp that opposes them in wrong. There is also consensus about the path to a bomb, and the arguments is about how Iran should behave, and when and how it would be best to progress."

When Iran decided to switch tactics in May 2019, it opted for continual, small-scale violations of the deal. It didn't want to go too far, but made it clear it would not sit on its hands. It never stopped its involvement in regional terrorism, or its missile development program. According to current estimates, Iran has some 1,100 missiles that can reach Israel – a major threat to the Israeli home front, as well as potential carriers of a future nuclear weapon.

"The Iranians intentionally reduced their obligations to the nuclear deal," says Zimmt. "In effect, they took steps that put them back where they were before the deal was signed, and significantly shortened their road to a bomb, should they decide to break out."

Iran's moves were carried out slowly to avoid prompting the world to take action. Conspiracy theorists, and there are plenty of these when it comes to Iran, claim that Tehran wants to lull the world into complacency, and if no rapid, determined action is forthcoming, we will wake up too late. However, the prevailing opinion is that Iran is maximizing its possibilities, intending to return to the deal.

Tehran is not compromising

The decision to raise the level of enrichment to 20% passed in the Iranian parliament after Fakhrizadeh's assassination. Supposedly, it was an infuriating step of revenge, but actually, it was another asset to take into future negotiations that could be given up easily in exchange for other gains that are important to Iran.

Although the decision was made a few weeks ago, practical steps were only taken a week ago. The Iranians apparently wanted to wait until Trump's final days in the white House to make sure he wouldn't go cray and use it as an excuse to attack. Like the rest of the world, they were reading the reports in the American media about a meeting the outgoing president held last month on the possibility of striking Iran.

The Iranian parliament's decision is very detailed. It states that within a month from the day the decision was made, enrichment to 20% would begin (which has already been executed), within two months all cooperation with IAEA inspectors would stop, and within three months the additional protocol of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which gives inspectors broader authority and allows surprise visits and use of advanced technology, would be frozen. Later, advanced centrifuges will be installed and 120 kg. (264 pounds) will be enriched to 20% in the first years.

Zimmt thinks that the decision was the result of internal political battles in Iran. In June, Iran is scheduled to hold presidential elections, and right now it appears as if the moderates under President Hassan Rouhani and Foreign Minister Javad Zarif will find it difficult to win again. The two, who helped create the prior deal, are seen as having failed to bring the fruits of it to the people. Instead of the growth they promised, Iran is in the midst of one of the worst economic crises in its history. The Iranian public, which sees the leadership's failure to address the COVID crisis, wants change. Experts think that the conservatives, led by Khamenei, will use that to recapture the presidency.

It's hard to exaggerate the economic crisis in Iran. The inflation balloon has been checked, but it is still rising at about 40% a year. The GDP dropped by about 5.3% in 2020, an improvement over 2019 (when it fell 8.2%), but light years from the 13.4% growth the country saw in 2016.

A group of protesters chant slogans at the old grand bazaar in Tehran, June 25, 2018 (Iranian Labor News Agency via AP) Iranian Labor News Agency via AP

The rise in unemployment and falling value of the rial are stirring up disquiet and making it a matter of urgency for Iran to throw off the crippling sanctions, particularly when it comes to oil exports and releasing Iranian assets frozen all over the world, namely bank accounts.

Tehran's position is uncompromising: it wants a return to the original nuclear deal and compensation for the damage done by the sanctions, as well as an explicit American apology. The Iranians are saying that if the Americans agree to come back to the deal, "There will be no need to change it by so much as a comma." In a series of remarks and interviews in the last few months, Biden has made it clear that he intends to return to the deal. This is also what his inner circle is saying, including some advisors who could wind up being appointed to key positions in the administration, notably Tony Blinken, who has been tapped for Secretary of state, and Wendy Sherman, who headed the American team in the negotiations for the 2015 deal and who could wind up serving as assistant secretary of state. Susan Rice, Obama's national security advisor, and former Secretary of State John Kerry, say the same thing.

This group will have a decided influence on the president-elect's policies. Someone would have to be an incorrigible optimist to believe that their views have changed 180 degrees since the 2015 deal was signed. It's likelier that they will try to get it done quickly, mostly to get the issue off the agenda. Biden has bigger headaches than Iran, and it's doubtful how much attention he'll be willing to pay to the Middle East muddle.

'A global problem, first of all'

It would appear that there are three options: to go back to the original deal; to leave things as they are; or to reach an interim agreement. Iran, of course, is demanding a full return to the 2015 deal, without reservations. Israel opposes that vigorously, and has voiced that objection on every possible platform, to every possible ear, and presented proof that Tehran is not to be trusted.

As the US was poised to pull out of the deal, many in Israel believed it would be a mistake. Opponents of the move argued that since the Iranian regime would not cave, a limited Iran under oversight was better for Israel than an unrestrained, desperate Iran. Now it looks like the disagreements on the Israeli side have been reduced to what steps should be taken with the new US administration. Should Israel challenge it, like it did the Obama administration, or should it seek out other avenues, even at the price of certain concessions, especially since Israel will need Biden's help on a number of other security and defense, economic, diplomatic, and international issues.

Gantz says that "the moves when it comes to the Iranians should be diplomatic, as well as economic and military. In Israel's case, we are developing defensive and offensive capabilities at the same time. The ones who should lead the moves are the US and other countries, because Iran is first of all a global problem, then a regional one, and then an Israeli one."

"You need to remember that Iran has a lot to lose from international pressure, and its citizens stand to gain from cooperation. So Israel will step up pressure, along with the US, and try to get results that will stop the nuclear program as well as Iran from gaining a foothold in the region," he adds.

Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi thinks that this is not a political issue: "Iran openly threatens to annihilate Israel," he told Israel Hayom this week. "It poses a direct threat [to Israel] through its nuclear program and an indirect threat through Hezbollah's missiles, its military entrenchment in Syria, and Hamas' capabilities. Israel won't accept the dangerous combination of an enemy state that intends to destroy us and is developing capabilities of doing just that.

"In any solution that is found, Israel will have to make sure that Iran does not retain the capability to break out toward a nuclear weapon. We're in 2021, not 2015, and it's clear to everyone today that the deal didn't fully answer defense and security needs," Ashkenazi said.

Gantz and Ashkenazi support talks with the Americans to try and secure a better Iran deal that will limit Iran more strongly for a longer time, in a variety of sectors, particularly the nuclear one. They also support having a reliable military option, like the one Israel had at the start of the last decade, when the possibility of attacking Iran's nuclear facilities was on the table. An option like that has more than a few ramifications – including economic ones, as intelligence, arms, and training cost a fortune. Billions were spent preparing the former option, which was never executed. The IDF used the first years of the deal to focus on other needs, especially upping the readiness of the ground forces. Now it will need to find the resources to implement Kochavi's latest orders. Last decade, most of the funding for the military option came from the defense budget, and we can assume the army will demand the same thing this time. Given the condition of the Israeli economy after the COVID crisis, and the cries for help from so many sectors, we can expect a fierce battle for money.

Preventing the nightmare

But even before that, Israel has to deal with the diplomatic arena, mostly in Washington. Israel has already declared that it will demand that a new deal differ from the previous one on a number of points and put Iran back to zero. Israel is demanding that the sunset clause be removed to ensure perpetual and uncompromising oversight of Iran's nuclear projects – sites, facilities, research institutes, and scientists, including ones who were suspected of working on nuclear weapons in the past.

Another demand is that Iran's nuclear research and development be severely restricted, mostly when it comes to high-tech centrifuges. The matter of Iran's missile program also needs to be addressed, especially when the country is developing missiles with a range of thousands of kilometers, which should worry not only Jerusalem, but the capitals of Europe.

Israel also wants a deal to limit Iran's attempts to entrench itself in the region via its satellites, which it arms with advanced weapons. Yadlin thinks that Israel should not insist on adding this to the deal, and should possibly forgo it, thereby retaining freedom of action for strikes in Syria and elsewhere in the region.

"Iran won't agree to give up the progress it made this past year unless the sanctions are fully removed and the original deal is re-adopted," Zimmt says. "I also think it won't be willing to negotiate on all the other things that are important to us – not on the sunset clause, not on the missiles, and not on its activity in the region. The Iranians will say – first return to the deal, then we'll talk.

"But if the deal is renewed, the Iranians won't have any reason to discuss anything. The expiration date will approach, and with it their freedom of action. Even worse, they'll recover economically and be able to step up their activities in the region and reach the sunset clause strong, determined, and more ready than ever to rush toward a bomb," Zimmt adds.

Zimmt finds it hard to imagine any way of bridging the gap between Iran, Israel, and the US. Biden will have to decide, and it's not certain he'll decide in Israel's favor.

"The assumption that the Iranians will fold in the face of maximum pressure hasn't proven itself. The situation there is hard, but they're not on the verge of collapse, and they have a certain amount of wiggle room," he says.

In this case, the better option could be an interim deal: Iran would receive certain easements of the sanctions in exchange for concessions. If that doesn't happen, Iran could keep making slow progress toward a nuclear bomb until it decides to go for it, hoping to make itself into North Korea 2.0.

This time, Israel's new partners – the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia – both of which are also afraid of Iran and will demand that it be kept under close watch to hamper its capabilities in a variety of fields. If they fail, some of these countries could wind up joining the nuclear arms race to avoid finding themselves under threat from Iran.

A scenario in which Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey, and possibly even other countries are marching toward nuclear weapons would be a nightmare. So Israel will want to do everything, absolutely everything, to make sure it doesn't become a reality. That road goes through the White House, but anyone who listens to the domestic discourse in Israel can already hear the voices that are once again talking about the day when Israel will have to act alone and attack Iran.

 

 

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