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NUKEWARS
Israel says Iran upping enrichment despite Rowhani election
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Aug 07, 2013


Top US military officer to visit Israel, Jordan
Washington, District Of Columbia (AFP) Aug 07, 2013 - The top US military officer is going to Israel and Jordan next week for a visit focused in part on Iran and the war in Syria, the US military said Wednesday.

General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will meet in Israel with his counterpart Benny Gantz to discuss advances in Iran's nuclear program, which Israel regards as an "existential threat."

"In Israel, the chairman expects to discuss the United States' unwavering commitment to Israel's security, including potential threats from Iran, the ongoing civil war in Syria, and uncertainty in the Sinai," his office said in a statement.

While in Jordan, he plans to visit US troops and get a better feel for how the conflict in Syria is affecting Jordan and the region, it said.

The exact dates of the visit were not disclosed but his office said he would leave Washington over the weekend.

Dempsey's visit comes just days after the inauguration of Iran's new President Hassan Rowhani, who has called for "serious" talks on Iran's nuclear program without delay.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, on Tuesday pressed the United States to step up pressure on Tehran, warning that otherwise it "will go all the way" and develop nuclear weapons.

Both the United States and Israel -- which has the Middle East's sole, if undeclared, nuclear arsenal -- have refused to rule out a resort to military action to prevent Iran from developing a weapons capability.

Instability in the Sinai is also expected to figure in Dempsey's talks in Israel. Attacks by Islamist militants have increased there since the overthrow of Egyptian president Mohammed Morsi.

In Syria, the US administration promised in June to increase military aid to the rebels, after accusing the regime of President Bashar al-Assad of using chemical weapons.

Dempsey, however, has been reticent about deepening the US military involvement in the conflict, and since March 2011 Washington has limited itself to non-lethal support for the rebels and humanitarian aid.

Fearing the Syrian conflict could spill over into Jordan, the United States has deployed F-16 fighters and Patriot missile defenses, along with about 1,000 US troops, to protect its close Mideast ally.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday that Iran had expanded its sensitive enrichment of uranium despite the election as president of moderate cleric Hassan Rowhani.

"Iran has not stopped its nuclear programme, even after its presidential election" on June 14, Netanyahu said in comments broadcast by public radio.

"At the moment, they are using 7,000 new centrifuges, including 1,000 which are of a newer type," he said on a visit to southern Israel.

"The Iranian president is trying to present a new image... but the nuclear programme's progress continues."

On Tuesday, Rowhani said Iran was ready to hold "serious" talks with the major powers without delay to allay Western concerns about its nuclear programme.

But he underlined that Iran would not abandon uranium enrichment, the sensitive activity at the heart of Western concerns which it suspended when Rowhani was chief nuclear negotiator a decade ago.

Iran said in March that it intends to install around 3,000 new-model centrifuges at a nuclear plant near the central town of Natanz enabling it to speed up the enrichment of uranium.

Around 13,500 older-model centrifuges are already in place at the plant.

The UN Security Council has passed repeated resolutions calling on Iran to suspend all enrichment and has imposed four rounds of sanctions.

The Iranian president warned on Tuesday that negotiations would not work under pressure but the Israeli premier took issue with that position.

Rowhani "tells us that no threat will deter him. This is false," Netanyahu said.

"The only thing in the past 20 years that has forced the Iranians to stop their nuclear programme is pressure and explicit threats of military operations," he said.

Netanyahu said on July 14 that Israel may be forced to act before the United States does over what it fears is a covert drive by Iran for a nuclear weapons capability.

Israel, which has the region's sole if undeclared nuclear arsenal, regards a nuclear-armed Iran as a threat to its very existence.

Even before Rowhani took office on Saturday, Netanyahu kept up Israel's tough rhetoric. He has called Rowhani a "wolf in sheep's clothing" who would "smile and build a bomb."

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