Last year, Kochavi said that the IDF was “accelerating” its plan to strike Iran’s nuclear program. The Israeli Air Force recently simulated a large-scale attack on Iran during military exercises over the Mediterranean Sea.
Kochavi said Iran’s nuclear program would still be a concern even if the nuclear deal, known as the JCPOA, was revived. He called the JCPOA a “bad deal” and said the agreement “allows Iran to become a nuclear state within a short time after its end date.”
But after the JCPOA expires, Iran would remain a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and has vowed over and over that it has no plans to develop a nuclear bomb. Israel, on the other hand, has a secret nuclear weapons program and an undeclared nuclear stockpile and refuses to sign the NPT.
Kochavi’s comments came after President Biden visited Israel and signed a joint declaration with Prime Minister Yair Lapid that said Iran could never acquire a nuclear weapon. Biden said he preferred diplomacy, but he has not made a serious effort to rejoin the JCPOA. Lapid disagreed with Biden and said there needed to be a “credible military threat” to prevent Tehran from getting a bomb.
No comments:
Post a Comment