Israel's Netanyahu launches all-out assault on Iran deal at UN
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu used his annual United Nations address on October 1 to launch an all-out assault on the historic nuclear deal with Iran, warning that his country would never let the Islamic Republic join the atomic weapons club.
Speaking at the yearly gathering of world leaders at the UN General Assembly, Netanyahu reiterated Israeli criticism of a deal between Iran and major world powers aimed at curbing Tehran's nuclear program.
He said that, once international sanctions are lifted, "unleashed and unmuzzled, Iran will go on the prowl."
Israel, Netanyahu said, would never allow Iran "to break in, to sneak in, or to walk into the nuclear weapons club."
Israel, which experts and diplomats say has the only nuclear arsenal in the Middle East, has repeatedly warned it is prepared to use military force to prevent Iran from acquiring atomic weapons. Tehran denies wanting nuclear arms and insists its nuclear program is peaceful.
US President Barack Obama's administration has vigorously defended the July 14 nuclear agreement with Iran against criticism from Republicans in Congress, who tried unsuccessfully to kill the deal, and Israel, describing it as the best way to avoid a new war in the Middle East.
Obama's already strained relations with Netanyahu deteriorated further in the months before the July nuclear deal because of the Israeli leader's forceful campaign against it.