You’re not alone, so don’t act unilaterally against Iran, head of Jewish think tank urges Israel (TIMES OF ISRAEL) By DAVID HOROVITZ 07/03/12)
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/youre-not-alone-so-dont-act-unilaterally-against-iran-head-of-top-jewish-think-tank-urges-israel/
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Stuart Eizenstat, former US ambassador to the EU who oversaw Iran
sanctions for president Clinton, bemoans inadequate level of trust
between Jerusalem and Washington
Ambassador Stuart Eizenstat, a former top US negotiator on Holocaust-
related compensation who today co-chairs the Jewish People Policy
Institute, has bemoaned the inadequate level of trust between Israel
and the US on tackling Iran’s nuclear drive, and firmly urged Israel
not to act unilaterally to thwart Tehran.
In an interview with The Times of Israel, Eizenstat, who participated
in Shimon Peres’s recent Presidential Conference and gave the keynote
address at last week’s B’nai B’rith journalism awards ceremony, said
Israel had to give more time for sanctions to play out. “The EU
sanctions, that is the oil sanctions, [only came into force on] July
1… While all this is going on, for Israel to act unilaterally in any
way, I think would be a serious mistake.”
Eizenstat, who served as ambassador to the European Union and deputy
Treasury secretary under president Bill Clinton, stressed that Israel
was not isolated in facing off against Iran, but rather that there
was “an extraordinary international coalition” that shared the
determination to ensure Iran could not attain nuclear weapons. “At
the end of the day, Israel is a country with 7 million people,” he
said, “and there are limits to what a country with 7 million people
can do when you’ve got an international coalition of hundreds of
millions of people on your side trying to achieve the same result.”
Eizenstat said Israel’s threat to resort to military action had been
extremely effective in helping produce bolstered sanctions. “But that
lever is lost once you’ve used it,” he noted.
Citing what he said were comments made at the Presidential Conference
by both former chief of the IDF General Staff Gabi Ashkenazi and
former senior US official Dennis Ross, to the effect that “there’s no
military solution,” Eizenstat elaborated: “The Iranians’ nuclear
program is dispersed, we know part of it is underground. But even if
it could somehow be surgically [eliminated] — and it can’t be one
airstrike, it has to be sustained airstrikes going over very
difficult air space — even if that could be done, what Ashkenazi and
Dennis were saying was they [the Iranians] have the [technical
nuclear] knowledge. You can’t take that out of their head. [After an
attack,] they would then have the justification of saying, ‘Well,
this is why we do need a nuclear weapon.’ And they would try to
rebuild. And you would still need sanctions and diplomacy.”
Eizenstat said he was disappointed by the lack of substantive
progress at the P5+1 negotiations with Iran to date, but that the
regime’s very presence at the talks underlined its economic concerns.
He said he was absolutely certain that the Iranian regime regarded
its own survival as its prime concern, and of far more importance
than a desire to eliminate Israel.
Nonetheless, he said, if it proved impossible to schedule a further
round of ministerial level talks, or if a next round also proved
unproductive, “then I think you have a very different situation.”
Asked whether he could then envisage the United States, at the head
of an international coalition, intervening militarily, Eizenstat
said: “Well, I don’t want to say militarily. I want to say ‘intervene
with other capabilities.’”(© 2012 THE TIMES OF ISRAEL 07/02/12)
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