JNS
According to the “Kan” broadcaster, the conclusion that Washington is “rushing towards” an agreement with Tehran leads Jerusalem to focus on requesting that any deal include enhanced inspections of nuclear sites.
Concluding that Washington is “rushing towards” a nuclear agreement with Iran, Jerusalem is limiting its goal to “influencing” the deal as much as it can, Israel’s Kan 11 TV reported on Tuesday.
According to the report, Israel has submitted a request to the administration in Washington that any version of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action reached with Iran include increased powers by inspectors to monitor Tehran’s nuclear activities.
The report also alleged that though Israel has in the past called for any new nuclear agreement include restrictions on Iran’s ballistic-missile program and terrorism-sponsoring, its “understanding” that the U.S. will not insist on such clauses has led Jerusalem to focus on improved supervision of nuclear sites.
Meanwhile, according to Kan, Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi, Mossad director Yossi Cohen National Security Council Adviser Meir Ben Shabat are due to visit Washington early next week to meet with their respective American counterparts and discuss the Iranian issue.
Also on Tuesday, deputy secretary-general of the E.U.’s diplomatic service, Enrique Mora, expressed satisfaction with the progress made in Vienna in negotiations regarding a possible return to the JCPOA. Mora, who chaired Tuesday’s meeting of the JCPOA Joint Commission, tweeted: “Joint Commission today. Progress made over the last two weeks. But much more hard work needed. Third expert group was created to address sequencing issues. I continue to think that diplomacy is only way forward for the #JCPOA to address ongoing challenges.”
In a statement issued after the meeting, the Joint Commission said that talks would resume next week towards “the possible return of the U.S. to the JCPOA and its full and effective implementation.”
Caption: The Iranian nuclear program's heavy water reactor near Arak.
Credit: Nanking 2012 via Wikimedia Commons.