
“In the past, the United State compensated Israel as part of the understandings and agreements between the two countries to maintain the IDF’s military advantage over other countries in the region, including the more moderate ones. Advanced arms sold to Arab country were sold “without teeth” and did not include some of the parts Israel received. For example, we got radars for planes in one quality, while the Saudis got these radars in a lesser quality.
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YNET
The Prime Minister’s Office went into battle mode this week. Prime Minister Netanyahu instructed the ministers and relevant bodies – the National Security Council, the Foreign Ministry, the Defense Ministry and the IDF, to keep quiet. Even during day-to-day work with their American colleagues, they are barred from mentioning anything that concerns the agreement with Iran. He didn’t even want to hear a peep that might imply that Israel views the battle against the agreement with Iran as a lost battle. And he didn’t want anyone to even hint at the fact that Israel is already preparing for the day after. Any comment made by an Israeli official – whether in uniform or not – which tries to portray the agreement with Iran as less than a national catastrophe, is viewed as sabotage of the government’s policies.
Netanyahu pushed everyone aside just as he did on the eve of the elections. This is his campaign. Like an obsessive gambler, he won’t leave the roulette table even when the numbers are against him. Now, he’s upping his gamble. Netanyahu still believes that he’s going to hit it big and break the bank. The Prime Minister’s Office believes that even if Netanyahu can’t stop the UN Security Council from lifting its sanctions over Iran, he could still prevent American sanctions from being removed using Congress.
The big drama over the extension of talks in Vienna happened on Wednesday. John Kerry and his people were not counting days, they were counting hours: If by Friday morning, Vienna time, an agreement is signed, what would be the time in Washington? And would that still count as July 9? There is a massive difference. Congress goes on hiatus on July 9. If the agreement is submitted before that, Congress is required to deal with it within 30 days. A month is a convenient period of time for the American administration, as it allows its opponents less time to mobilize against it. If the agreement is submitted after July 9, however, they will have at least two months to organize a campaign against it. The Iranians, who know this timetable well, took advantage of the catch 22 the American delegation was facing in order to try to extort better terms.
The PMO woke up on Wednesday morning with the hope that victory was closer than they initially estimated, and that President Obama himself would bring to the collapse of the talks. Jerusalem’s wet dream is to see the members of the American delegation pack their suitcases and get on a plane. The leaks from conversations between President Obama and Congressmen about the fact there is less than a 50 percent chance of reaching an agreement, were met here with suspicion. Israel felt that this was a psychological trick in order to pressure the Iranian delegation, as the clear American interest to reach an agreement hasn’t changed.
Israel assumes that if the delegations do indeed reach a critical juncture, the American president will postpone the signing for no longer than one month, while pretending there is a crisis and that America is standing firm. This trick of postponing, Israeli sources say, is no more than an attempt to win the trust of some Democrats in the House who are on the fence and threatening to vote with the Republicans against the agreement.
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