Saturday, December 15, 2007

Dichter slams U.S. 'misconception' of Iranian nuclear threat

Barak Ravid
Haaretz Correspondent


Public Security Minister Avi Dichter criticized the new United States intelligence assessment on Iran's nuclear program, saying it could lead to a disastrous miscalculation similar to Israel's failure to anticipate Egypt and Syria's surprise invasion in the 1973 Yom Kippur War.
During a town hall meeting in Holon on Saturday, Dichter called the National Intelligence Estimate an "American misconception concerning Iran's nuclear weapons, which is liable to lead to a regional Yom Kippur [War] where Israel will be among the countries that are threatened."

The NIE, released earlier this month, said Iran had halted its nuclear weapons program in 2003, and that the program remains on hold.
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Dichter said it is unfortunate that Israel has failed to impress upon Washington just how imminent the threat of Iranian nuclear weapons is.

"Something went wrong in the American blueprint for analyzing the severity of the Iranian nuclear threat," Dichter said. "We have to hope that the U.S. will know to correct this. Israel and other states must help in any way including providing intelligence material so as to fix this miscalculation."

"A misconception by the world's leading superpower is not just an internal American occurrence," the former Shin Bet chief said. "This has to cause concern in Israel and many other countries."

Dichter added that the NIE's conclusions are also likely to impact the dynamics of negotiations with the Palestinians.

"The U.S. has been authorized to be the arbiter that determines whether the Palestinians are fulfilling their road map obligations on all matters relating to combating terrorism," the public security minister said. "Those same [intelligence] arms in the U.S. are apt to make a mistake and declare that the Palestinians have fulfilled their commitments, which would carry with it very serious consequences from Israel's vantage point."

Dichter also addressed the possibility of a peace agreement with Syria.

"There is no deal with Syria without [Israel] retreating from the Golan," he said. "Whoever wants [a peace agreement] knows that we would have to withdraw from the Golan and the question would then be what will be the guarantees Israel would receive under these circumstances."

On the question of negotiations with Hamas, the minister left little doubt whether government policy would change any time soon.

"There's nothing to talk about with Hamas in Gaza because this is an organization of murderers," Dichter added. "We have to create a deterrence in Gaza that will lead to a halt of Qassam fire in any way possible."

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