‘Iran deal not cast in stone, there’s still a backup plan’

2015/04/03
EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini addresses during a joint statement with Iran's Foreign Minister Javad Zarif (R) in Lausanne April 2, 2015. (Reuters/Ruben Sprich)

Israel has always been strongly opposed to any nuclear deal with Iran. At the same time, Israel – which has so far refused to sign the non-proliferation treaty - is suspected of having a stockpile of 80 nuclear warheads. There is also Saudi Arabia that is seeking a way to sabotage the nuclear deal, as well.


RT: Israel allegedly possesses a large stockpile of nuclear weapons. Why is it so interested in what Iran is doing?


Moeen Raoof: Israel wants to be the only power in the Middle East because it is moving more Palestinians out of Gaza and the West Bank, and it wants to dominate the whole area. If there are any other nuclear powers in the area then Israel has competition. And it doesn’t want any competition at all.


RT: How is Israel, in particular its Prime Minister Netanyahu, going to respond to the breakthrough in the talks with Iran?


MR: It hasn’t responded kindly at all. I think there is a case of ‘good cop/bad cop’ where the Americans in the past 10 to 15 years have always had this policy of having a ‘bad cop’ who is against whatever agreements they come up with. And this is the role that Israel is playing; and also the [US] Congress is playing that role. As we know they’ve said that the agreement could be reversed when the next president comes in. It is a simple case of having a backup plan, if you like.


RT: The relationship between Washington and Teheran looks rosier than it looked a few years ago? How is Israel going to react to this deal, which it has already expressed much opposition to?


READ MORE: Obama: Historic deal reached on Iran nuclear program.


MR: The agreement reached today isn’t cast in stone. It remains to be seen that by June unless somebody - especially Israel - doesn’t come with another reason… for example, they’ve been blaming Iran for the terrorism in the region, especially in Syria, Iraq, and Yemen now. There is always something that could go wrong between now and then. It is not a sure thing that this agreement will stand in three months’ time, which means that Israel again could come up with an accusation. We know it has always over the last ten years consistently accused Iran of being 90 days away from building a nuclear weapon. So they could accuse Iran of hiding nuclear material and scupper the plan completely.


RT: In a speech at the UN General Assembly three years ago, Israel's Prime Minister used a memorable cartoon bomb to hammer home his country's fears of a nuclear armed Tehran. A lot has changed since then – a new leader Rouhani made Iran change its tone and Washington started dialogue. Do you think Israel really will try to scupper this deal at this stage?


MR: Definitely, I guarantee it. What is happening is [what] President Obama today said himself that there is also the ballistic missiles issue and also the alleged terrorism involvement of Iran in the region. These are backup issues that they could invoke between now and June. And I’m sure that Israel will come up with some excuse why this plan can’t go through. And Congress would back [it].


RT: Will they be successful and will people see through these games, these attempts to scupper this deal?


MR: People have been seeing these false accusations for the past 10 years. They haven’t stopped the Americans or Israelis from ensuring the sanctions continue to be imposed against a nation that has said clearly that they would never build a nuclear weapon or threatened any other nation on this Earth. It is a simple case of what is best for “Israel and friends”.


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