Netanyahu met Sunday with
French President Francois Hollande in Tel Aviv and is scheduled to
visit Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Wednesday.
The United States and
other nations are "getting close" to an interim deal with Iran that
would prevent its nuclear program "from advancing, and roll it back" in
key areas, a senior U.S. administration official told CNN on Friday. The
proposal would ease some sanctions on Iran.
Last week, Netanyahu called a proposed agreement a "bad deal for peace."
In an interview airing
Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union," he repeated the "bad deal" charge.
"If you do a bad deal, you may get to the point where your only option
is a military option," he told CNN chief political correspondent Candy
Crowley. "So a bad deal actually can lead you to exactly the place you
don't want to be."
"I would like to make it
clear that there can be disagreements even among the best of friends,
certainly on issues related to our future and our fate," Netanyahu said
Sunday at the start of Israel's weekly Cabinet meeting. "I hope that we
will succeed in convincing our friends this week and in the days
afterwards to achieve a much better agreement."
U.S. Secretary of Defense
Chuck Hagel, in an exclusive interview with CNN Pentagon correspondent
Barbara Starr, said Saturday night the United States is "listening
carefully" to Israel. He reiterated that Washington is continuing its
longtime strategy to ensure that Iran cannot gain the capability of
building nuclear weapons.
He said the U.S. is considering different options to accomplish that goal.
But he said it would be
irresponsible if the two sides in the negotiations didn't pursue
diplomatic engagement while considering Israel's concerns.
"What we have been
trying to do, and are doing, is working through these difficult issues,"
he said Saturday at the Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley,
California. "We think that there is some possibility (of an agreement)
-- although we're very clear-eyed on this. We understand every danger
and dimension of what Iran represents to Israel and us, and our other
partners in the Middle East."
Hagel said the United
States -- and Iran -- understand that there is the possibility of a
military strike from a potentially isolated Israel.
"We would never tell
Israel, or any country, a sovereign nation, an ally, a very close
partner and friend as Israel is, that they can't do something," he said.
"They will do whatever they think is necessary to defend their own
interest."
During the forum, which brought together defense experts and lawmakers, Hagel said the U.S. won't sign a bad deal.
"This administration is
not going to try to force something that doesn't fit to get a deal. We
won't do that," he said. "The stakes are too high for our country and
for the world."
There was plenty of
skepticism at the forum about the proposed agreement with Iran. Much of
that skepticism was led by key Democrats, including Hagel's predecessor,
Leon Panetta.
He was concerned about
what will happen with the already enriched nuclear fuel, with thousands
of centrifuges, with a heavy water reactor under construction in Arak,
Iran.
"And how of all of this going to be inspected and verified?" Panetta said to CNN.
Is trust enough when it comes to Iran? The powerful chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee said no.
"I love the slogan
'Trust but verify,' but I've never understood it. Because I think the
right slogan is 'Don't trust,'" Sen. Carl Levin said during the panel
discussion. "I don't trust the Iranians -- and by the way, they don't
trust us."
The proposal covers
every aspect of Iran's nuclear program, including uranium enrichment,
uranium stockpiles and all nuclear facilities including military ones,
the senior U.S. administration official told CNN on Friday.
The deal will be on the table during the next round of talks in Geneva, Switzerland, that begin Wednesday evening.
Iran has always
maintained that its nuclear program is purely for peaceful purposes.
Even though Iran has denied working toward nuclear weapons, it has said
it will not submit to any plan that would totally eliminate its nuclear
program.
The U.N.'s nuclear
watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has found some modest
progress. Iran has halted the installation of new advanced centrifuges,
which are quicker at generating highly enriched uranium, according to an
IAEA report.
Iran has support from
Russia, whose foreign minister said Saturday on Russian TV that the
opportunity to bring about an end to a decade-long standoff must not be
passed up.
"Our common impression
is that there is a very good chance now which should not be missed,"
Sergey Lavrov said in remarks broadcast on state-run TVC.
The United States, along
with the four other permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and
Germany -- known as the P5+1 -- came close to a deal during talks with
Iran last week in Geneva, but the discussions ended with each side
blaming the other for the lack of an agreement.
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