"The United States deplores the decision to single out Israel in the Middle East section of the NPT document."
On the other hand:
WASHINGTON -- It was only one paragraph buried deep in the most plain-vanilla kind of diplomatic document, 40 pages of dry language committing 189 nations to a world free of nuclear weapons. But it has become the latest source of friction between Israel and the United States in a relationship that has lurched from crisis to crisis over the last few months.
At a meeting to review the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty in May, the United States yielded to demands by Arab nations that the final document urge Israel to sign the treaty -- a way of spotlighting its historically undeclared nuclear weapons.
Israel believed it had assurances from the Obama administration that it would reject efforts to include such a reference, an Israeli official said, and it saw this as another sign of unreliability by its most important ally. In a recent visit to Washington, Israel's defense minister, Ehud Barak, raised the issue in meetings with senior American officials.
And in an all too no longer usual incident:
At the last review conference, in 2005, the Bush administration refused to go along with any references to Israel, one of several reasons the meeting ended in acrimony, without any statement.
This time, Israel believed the Obama administration would again take up its cause. As a non-signatory to the treaty, Israel did not attend the meeting. But American officials consulted the Israelis on a text in advance, which they found acceptable, a person familiar with those discussions said. That deepened their surprise at the end.
Administration officials said the United States negotiated for months with Egypt, on behalf of the Arab states, to leave out the reference to Israel. While the United States supports the goal of a nuclear-free Middle East, it stipulated that any conference would be only a discussion, not the beginning of a negotiation to compel Israel to sign on to the treaty.
The United States practices a policy of ambiguity with respect to Israel's nuclear stockpile, neither publicly discussing it nor forcing the Israeli government to acknowledge its existence.
The United States, recognizing that the document would upset the Israelis, sought to distance itself even as it signed it.
But you know, with all the perfidy and clear wish to be APART from Israel this, frankly, functionally somewhat antisemitic administration has personified, they seem as ill prepared to deal with the realities of Israel's determination to survive no matter what we do, as they are stupidly naive about diplomacy actually achievement ANYTHING with regard to Iran's insistence on having nuclear weapons.
2 comments:
Israel believed it had assurances from the Obama administration...
What naivete on the part of Israel!
Borglam's Caliphate leaders know that Israel has 1 or more nukes for every Muslim population center in the world.. but, do they care.?
if Israel goes down they aren't go'n down alone. they probably have about 120 nukes.. that will create a devastating global Nuclear winter..
better have some warm clothes and enough food for a couple years.. and maybe improve the Caliber of your home security system.. i have, because the Gangs will be out foraging before too long.
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