Obama increase pressure to Iran
President Barack Obama says he doesn't want war
but insists he would attack Iran if that was the only
option left to stop that nation from getting a nuclear weapon."Loose talk of war" only plays into Iran's hands, Obama said
Sunday. On Monday, he will try to persuade Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to slow quickening pressure among many in his hawkish government to
attack Iran's disputed nuclear development sites. Obama is trying to avert an
Israeli strike that could come this spring, and which the United States sees as dangerously premature. The president is expected to tell
Netanyahu in private at the White House that although the U.S. is committed to Israel's security it does
not want to be dragged into another war. Obama is unlikely to spell out U.S. "red lines"
that would trigger a military response, despite Israeli pressure to do so.U.S.
officials believe that while Tehran can build a nuclear
weapon, it has not yet decided to do so. They want to give sanctions time to
pressure Iran to give up any military nuclear ambitions. Israel says the threat is
too great to wait and many officials there are advocating a pre-emptive
strike.Obama did not directly call on Israel to stand down, and
made a point of saying Israel should always have
the right to defend itself as it sees fit.That was the part of Obama's speech
to the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee that Netanyahu said he liked best. Speaking to reporters in Canada ahead of his arrival
in the U.S., Netanyahu made no reference to the sanctions and diplomacy Obama
emphasized Obama is unlikely to persuade Netanyahu that economic sanctions and
diplomacy are enough to prevent Iran from getting a
nuclear weapon, and he is unlikely to win any new concessions from Netanyahu on
peace talks, the issue that drew bad blood between the two men in previous
meetings and led the Israeli leader to publicly scold Obama last year. Netanyahu
has not publicly backed a military strike, but his government spurned arguments
from top U.S. national security leaders that a pre-emptive attack would fail."Now
is not the time for bluster," Obama said. "Now is the time to let our
increased pressure sink in." Obama framed military force as a last resort,
not the next option at a time when sanctions are squeezing Iran. He said just the
talk of war has driven up the price of oil to the benefit of Iran. Although Israel says it hasn't
decided whether to strike, it has signalled readiness to do so within the next
several months. The top U.S. military officer
recently called a unilateral strike "imprudent," a mild catchall for
the chain-reaction of oil price hikes, Iranian retaliation, terror strikes and
a possible wider Mideast war that U.S. official’s fear could flow from an Israeli strike. Israel says a nuclear-armed Iran would be a threat to
its existence. It cites Iranian leaders' repeated calls for Israel's destruction,
support for anti-Israel militant groups and its arsenal of ballistic missiles
that are already capable of striking Israel. Israel also fears a nuclear Iran would touch off an
atomic weapons race in a region hostile to Israel's existence.Addressing the
powerful pro-Israel lobby, Obama delivered messages to multiple political
audiences: Israel, Iran, Jewish voters, a restless Congress, a wary
international community and three Republican presidential contenders who will
speak to the same group Tuesday. At the core was his bullish assertion that the
United States will never settle for containing a nuclear-armed Iran or fail to defend Israel.
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