DACrowe
Avenger
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2000
- Messages
- 30,765
- Reaction score
- 625
- Points
- 78
Then you heard him say a better deal should be negotiated, with tougher sanctions imposed at the same time, to avoid a physical conflict with a nuclear armed Iran.
Sorry, I can't agree with that level of crazy.
Israel is the sane party here.
I haven't commented here in a long time but I just have to say I strongly dislike this bit of dishonestly that comes from Netanyahu and his American defenders (many of whom simply like the idea of him being POTUS instead of Obama).
1) The sanctions we have now were designed to get them to come to the table in the first place. And their strongest points were negotiated by the Obama administration (note: not Bush) that somewhat inconceivably got Russia and China to come onboard. Since then, Putin has returned to Russia as president--Obama had a much better relationship with Medvedev before Putin's 2012 reascension. Since then, relations between Russia and the U.S. have not been what I'd classify as "great." Russia is looking for an excuse to pull out of the sanctions, and if they did, so likely would the Chinese. As a result, these sanctions may fall apart.
2) If we are to believe what Netanyahu has been saying (for 20 years) at face value, then that means Iran will have nuclear capabilities in a year. In which case, the clock has run out. Which leads us to...
3) Netanyahu asking for more sanctions and a better deal sounds about as genuine as his lip-service to a two-state solution in Israel where he allows settlements to continue being built along the West Bank.
If this is a bad deal, it's a bad deal and we should walk away. However, at the moment, we don't know what the deal looks like. But we do know that the Netanyahu solution is: bomb the sites and put them back 3-5 years. Then they'll be even more hellbent on building nuclear weapons. At which point, there is one solution.
Netanyahu asking for a better deal is like Bush saying if Saddam just leaves the capital in the next 24 hours we'll call off the war. Look at the actions, not the words.