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Supporters of Iranian President Hassan Rowhani hold his portraits outside the Mehrabad Airport in Tehran to welcome Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif who led the nuclear negotiations with world powers, during his arrival from Geneva yesterday.
JERUSALEM: A nuclear deal between Iran and world powers has blunted Israel’s military threats against Tehran but the Jewish state can still exert pressure on its arch-foe through diplomatic and intelligence means, analysts say.
Iran agreed to curb its nuclear programme for the next six months in exchange for limited sanctions relief following marathon talks with the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany in Geneva that ended on Sunday.
Israel’s shrill response to the deal saw Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu emphasise the Jewish state was “not bound” by the agreement and would strike Iran if necessary to stop it reaching atomic weapons capability.
But experts say the Geneva deal has taken the military option firmly off the table, at least for the six-month negotiating period.
“As long as the international community is moving into this six-month period where there’s supposed to be a negotiated comprehensive deal, it’s hard to believe Israel would take action,” said Dr Emily Landau of Tel Aviv University’s Institute for National Security Studies.
Yoel Guzansky, former Iran analyst at the Israeli prime minister’s office and a research fellow at INSS, agreed. “Israel’s options are now few and limited,” Guzansky said. “Netanyahu has said a nuclear agreement is not binding for Israel, which reserves the right to defend itself by itself.
“But the real chances of a military strike happening after an agreement which effectively sides the entire international community with Iran, are significantly less than they were yesterday,” he said. “The fact an agreement was signed between Iran and the P5+1 countries will make it hard for Israel to act on its own.”
However, this does not leave Israel with no options whatsoever, since the interim deal paves the way for further negotiations whose success remains to be seen.
“In terms of US President Barack Obama’s project of putting time on the clock and not allowing the Iranians to move forward with their nuclear programme during the months of negotiations, the deal is more or less something that can be lived with (for the Israelis),” Landau said. Under the deal, Tehran will limit uranium enrichment — the area that raises most suspicions over Iran’s nuclear programme — to low levels that can only be used for civilian energy purposes. In return, it will get $7bn in sanctions relief.
“What we’ve seen over the past weeks in terms of talks will seem quite easy compared to how future talks will be,” Landau said.
“It’s not a great deal, but it’s not a disaster either.”
Dr Uzi Rabi, an Iran specialist at Tel Aviv University, said Israel might use the interim period to put Iran under diplomatic and intelligence pressure. “This represents a six-month period where the Iranians are going to recover economically,” he said. “Israel now needs to start thinking, how are we going to cope.
“This could include a concerted intelligence effort to expose the military dimension of Iran’s nuclear effort, or to expose any violation by Iran of the terms of the agreement.” And any slip up by Iran would make it easier for Israel to push once again for military action in the long term, said Guzansky. “But if and when the Iranians cheat — they’ve cheated before, and might do so again — and then Israel will have the legitimacy to use other means and to say, I told you so,” said Guzansky.
“If Israel finds a secret site Iran didn’t declare,” Israel will find it easier to take action. In the meantime, the diplomatic effect of the deal could see Israel and the US’s Arab allies finding more in common, despite their past enmity, the analysts said. “When you talk about alliances now in the Middle East, (Israel, Saudi Arabia and the UAE) is a tacit alliance,” Guzansky said.
“Those countries are even more concerned about Iran than Israel is. The next six months will be a test for US-Israeli relations and US-Arab relations.” Britain’s Foreign Secretary William Hague said Israel should avoid taking any action that would undermine the interim nuclear agreement reached between Iran and world powers.
Urging world leaders to give the interim deal a chance , Hague said it was important to try to understand those who opposed the agreement. But he urged Israel and others to confine their criticism to rhetoric.
Agencies
It’s a victory for Iran: Hezbollah
BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Hezbollah yesterday hailed a nuclear deal between its patron Iran and world powers as “a major victory” for Tehran.
The agreement, struck over the weekend, will see some sanctions that were imposed on Iran over its nuclear programme eased in exchange for Tehran halting some of its most sensitive atomic work.
“What was achieved through this agreement is a major victory for Iran and to all the people of the region and it is a defeat for the enemies of these people,” Hezbollah said in a statement.
“It is a model victory and world class achievement which the Islamic state adds to its record which shines with victories and achievements.”
The Shia group, founded with Iranian help in the 1980s, has grown into a powerful political and military force and is fighting alongside President Bashar Al Assad’s army in Syria’s civil war.Reuters