In the Israeli press: Iran manages to quickly restore and improve the facilities of the nuclear program that Israel is trying to destroy
In a speech at a conference at the Institute for Policy and Strategy at Reichman University in Herzliya, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett hinted at a possible conflict between Israel and the United States over Iran. His speech was connected with the upcoming resumption of negotiations in Vienna between the major world powers and the Islamic Republic of Iran on a nuclear deal.
Israeli author Ruthie Blum discusses these events and the connection between them in her article published in The Jerusalem Post.
In his speech, Bennett makes it clear to Washington that even if there is a return to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), also called the nuclear deal, Israel is not a party to the agreement or bound by it.
The columnist also mentions the publication in the American newspaper New York Times. The publication, referring to high-ranking US officials, claims that numerous "surgical" strikes by Israelis on nuclear facilities in the Islamic Republic are "counterproductive."
The Israeli press, citing experts from the United States, claims that Iran is able to quickly restore and improve the facilities of its nuclear program, which Israel is trying to destroy. Therefore, in the end, such attacks have no special practical significance on the Iranian nuclear program. Moreover, each attack leads to an increase in anti-Israeli sentiment in Tehran.
Bennett blames Tehran's success on his predecessor Benjamin Netankhu, since he, in his opinion, did not make significant efforts to prevent the Islamic Republic from developing a nuclear missile weapons.
- declares the Israeli prime minister.
- https://twitter.com/naftalibennett
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