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Anshel Pfeffer

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

Analysis

Israeli leaders fear US Iran sanctions 'not enough'

January 26, 2012 12:52
\"Sanctions insufficient\" - Ehud Barak
2 min read

The round of sanctions against Iran decided upon by the United States and the European Union over the past couple of weeks is unprecedented, but Israeli leaders are still not convinced that they will be enough to force the Iranian regime to forsake its nuclear ambitions.

A day after EU leaders voted to approve a package of sanctions forbidding the purchase of Iranian oil and petrochemical products by the end of June and cutting off all transactions with the main Iranian banks, Defence Minister Ehud Barak insisted in an interview that it would not be enough. "We are not there yet" he said, echoing remarks by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said last week during a visit to Holland that the European sanctions should take effect immediately.

While the Israeli government is satisfied with the fact that the EU has finally got around to boycotting Iranian oil, the latest assessments of Tehran's intentions, as articulated in a report by the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University, is that the nuclear programme is a key part of Iran's bid for regional supremacy and will not be abandoned.

Speaking at a cabinet meeting on Sunday, Mr Netanyahu referred to the international Holocaust Remembrance Day taking place this week. He did not mention Iran by name but his intentions were clear when he said: "The difference between 1942 and 2012 is not the absence of enemies - there is still the will to exterminate the Jewish people and its state. That will has not changed, what has changed is our ability to defend ourselves, and the determination to do so."