January 31, 2005
Daily Times
PARIS: Israeli Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz has told French lawmakers that Iran is at “the point of no-return” on building nuclear weapons, according to a transcript of his remarks to the National Assembly made public on Friday.
Mofaz, who warned openly in London this week that Iran would not be permitted to build a nuclear bomb, has in the past said that Israel has operational plans in place for a strike against Iranian targets. Mofaz told the French National Assembly’s defence commission that “he ardently hoped that a recourse to military action would not be necessary” in Iran, according the transcript of the Tuesday meeting.
But he said that to avoid this, there would have to be careful inspections aimed at removing any ambiguity about the existence of a military nuclear project.
Even if Iran recognised Israel’s existence, Mofaz said “the possession of a nuclear weapon by an extremist regime is not acceptable.” “The danger is great,” he said. “The possession of non-conventional weapons could allow Iran to carry out terrorist actions with complete impunity and destabilise the free world.” Iran’s Revolutionary Guards warned earlier this week that any attack against the country would be met with an “astonishing” retaliation.
The Islamic republic also responded to the Israeli allegations that it was close to developing a nuclear weapon, saying the latest accusations were designed to shift attention away from Israel’s own weapons and its “terror” against Palestinians.
While Iran insists its nuclear activities are strictly peaceful, Britain, France and Germany have been engaged in diplomatic efforts to secure long-term guarantees that the Tehran regime will not seek the bomb. Mofaz, an outspoken and hawkish former army chief-of-staff who was responsible for adopting increasingly tough measures against the Palestinian intifada, told the defence commission that controls on Iranian nuclear activities by the International Atomic Energy Agency were “largely insufficient.” afp
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