Netanyahu calls Iran’s enrichment move a ‘very, very dangerous step’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on
Sunday an announced increase of uranium enrichment by Iran was an extremely
dangerous move and he again called on Europe to impose punitive sanctions on Tehran.
Netanyahu made the remarks after Iran said it is
fully prepared to enrich uranium at any level and with any amount, in further
defiance of US efforts to squeeze it with sanctions and force it to renegotiate
a 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.
In a news conference broadcast live, senior Iranian
officials said Tehran, which has denied seeking nuclear arms, would keep
reducing its commitments every 60 days unless signatories of the pact moved to
protect it from US sanctions.
“This is a very, very dangerous step,” Netanyahu
said in public remarks to his cabinet.
“Iran has violated its solemn promise under the UN
Security Council not to enrich uranium beyond a certain level,” he said.
“I call on my friends, the heads of France, Britain
and Germany - you signed this deal and you said that as soon as they take this
step, severe sanctions will be imposed - that was the Security Council
resolution. Where are you?” Netanyahu said.
If any one of the three European parties to the
accord believe Iran has violated the agreement, they can trigger a dispute
resolution process that could, within as few as 65 days, end at the UN Security
Council with a reimposition of UN sanctions on Tehran.
The other remaining signatories, Russia and China,
are allies of Iran and unlikely to make such a move.
“The enrichment of uranium is made for one reason
and one reason only - it’s for the creation of atomic bombs,” said Netanyahu, a
strong opponent of the 2015 agreement.