Netanyahu warns, having business with Iran will be a big mistake
On Sunday, Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu stated that to have business with Iran will be a mistake," signaling Israeli resistance from an anticipated push by the newly elected US President Joe Biden to restore the international atomic agreement with Iran.
The enmity between the two nations goes back to the 1979 ousting of Iran's Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi and the foundation of a Shiite republic by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
As per history, before the Shiite ministry came to power, the two nations shared good relations. Iran was the second Muslim nation to perceive Israel in 1950. Tehran and Tel Aviv were connected by an unofficial partnership, based on close participation in military, horticultural, and petroleum issues.
In a press session with Robert O'Brien, President Donald Trump's national security adviser, Netanyahu expressed aiming at Biden, who has promised to rejoin the atomic agreement if Iran consents to exact adherence. The agreement, which lifted sanctions on Iran in negotiation for curbs on its atomic program has been disclosed since Trump withdrew from it in 2018.
"However, as long as Iran proceeds to threaten and subjugate its neighbors, as long as Iran keeps on calling for Israel's destruction and continues to train terror groups all over the world, and as long as Iran continues in making atomic weapons, returning to the same old thing with Iran, is difficult," Netanyahu stated on Sunday. "We all should join to forestall this a significant danger to world harmony."
O'Brien came days after the US declared that Israel and Morocco were setting up full diplomatic relations — making it the fourth such agreement with Israel and an Arab state facilitated by the Trump government.
O'Brien added that the Trump government's pressure campaign against Iran has been fruitful and the series of deals among Israel and Arab nations would solidify what he called "the traditions of peacemakers" Netanyahu and Trump
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