Israel Threatens to Attack Iran This Year

Posted by Bimo Hery Prabowo On Jumat, 28 September 2012 0 comments

Speech of the Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, the UN General Assembly, Thursday, September 27, 2012, about Iran's nuclear development spawned speculation in Israel that he would order his troops to attack Iran this year.
In his speech at the UN podium, Netanyahu showed a picture of "red lines" in the form of a cartoon bomb which shows that how close Iran with nuclear weapons.
According to observers in Israel, a military incursion deadline Jewish State was conducted in early 2013 after the U.S. presidential election in November. "The year 2012 will terflewati Determination without firmness," Ofer Shelah wrote in the Maariv newspaper, Friday, September 28, 2012.
Netanyahu did not say explicitly, but implicitly he said that Israel would attack Iran's uranium enrichment fasiltias if they are really beyond the red line. The meaning of the red line is the boundary that shows Iran has increased enrichment of uranium into nuclear weapons.
Israeli daily Maariv and other, Yedioth Ahronoth, said the 2013 season seems to be a set time limit Netanyahu. According to him, at the time, Iran was enriching uranium at 20 percent. This amount is enough for Iran to make a bomb first.
But the front page of the daily newspaper Haaretz and liberal pro-Israel government, Hayom, wrote that the deadline was mid-2012 estimate is outside Netanyahu when Iran was ready to move weapons development. "The possibility of the invasion will be done in a matter of months or even weeks," they wrote.
Iran rejects accusations preparing nuclear weapons, Netanyahu's speech was "baseless accusations and unreasonable." Islamic Republic of Iran is ready to respond with full force to any attack melwan. "
When the question and answer session in the Israeli Army Radio, whether Netanyahu has signaled that he would attack Iran in the spring if the United States and the European Union failed to impose sanctions on Iran's nuclear industry development, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said, "No, I not that far, "he said simply.
"The Prime Minister sent a message to the international community that if they want to prevent future wars, they must prevent Iran's nuclear project," Lieberman added.