PM Netanyahu meets with Secretary Kerry 6 Nov 2013

PM Netanyahu meets with US Secretary of State Kerry

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    PM Netanyahu: I believe that the pressure should be maintained and even increased on the Iranian regime, because they're increasing enrichment, and I believe that it's possible with intense pressure to get Iran to fully dismantle its nuclear weapons.
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    PM Netanyahu meeting with US Secretary of State John Kerry in Jerusalem PM Netanyahu meeting with US Secretary of State John Kerry in Jerusalem Copyright: GPO
     
     
    (​Communicated by the Prime Minister's Media Adviser)

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, this morning (Wednesday, 6 November 2013), in Jerusalem, met with US Secretary of State John Kerry and said at the start of their meeting:
    "We heard the chants 'Death to America' two days ago again in Tehran, and this is, I believe, the true face of this regime or the person who controls this regime, the so called 'Supreme Leader'. I think such a regime must not have the world's most dangerous weapons.

    I believe that as long as they continue their goal to enrich uranium, to get nuclear weapons, the pressure should be maintained and even increased because they're increasing enrichment, and I believe that it's possible with intense pressure because of the sanctions regime led in large part by the United States to get Iran to fully dismantle its nuclear weapons program. I'd be very worried with any partial deals that enable Iran to maintain those capabilities but begin to reduce sanctions because I think this could undermine the longevity and durability of the sanctions regime.
    We seek peace with the Palestinians. We agreed three months ago on terms. We stand by those terms, we abide scrupulously by the terms of the agreement and the understandings with which we launched the negotiations. I'm concerned about their progress because I see the Palestinians continuing with incitement, continuing to create artificial crises, continue to avoid, run away from the historic decisions that are needed to make a genuine peace. I hope that your visit will help steer them back to a place where we could achieve the historical peace that we seek and that our people need."


     
  • Full text of remarks to the press

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    PM Netanyahu: Good morning.

    It's my pleasure to welcome my friend John Kerry to Jerusalem. We have two big items on our agenda. The first is Iran. We just marked the event 34 years ago when the American embassy was seized and we heard the chants "death to America". We heard that two days ago again in Tehran, and this is, I believe, the true face of this regime or the person who controls this regime, the so called "Supreme Leader".
           
    I think that this attitude, which is buttressed by a policy of terror worldwide, supporting Hezbollah, Hamas and all the forces that are against peace, participating in the mass murder in Syria, I think such a regime must not have the world's most dangerous weapons. We've spoken about it a million times, and I believe that as long as they continue their goal to enrich uranium, to get nuclear weapons, the pressure should be maintained and even increased because they're increasing enrichment, and I believe that it's possible with intense pressure because of the sanctions regime led in large part by the United States to get Iran to fully dismantle its nuclear weapons program, and that's really what we're seeking.

    A full, peaceful, complete dismantling of Iran's nuclear weapons capability, end of all enrichment, end of all centrifuges, end of the plutonium reactor. If this is achieved, I'd welcome it. I'd be very worried with any partial deals that enable Iran to maintain those capabilities but begin to reduce sanctions because I think this could undermine the longevity and durability of the sanctions regime.

    We seek peace with the Palestinians. We've spoken, John, many many times about this, and because of your efforts we launched several months ago an initiative to seek a peaceful agreement between Israel and the Palestinians. I want peace with the Palestinians, Israel wants peace with the Palestinians.

    We agreed three months ago on [inaudible] terms. We stand by those terms, we abide scrupulously by the terms of the agreement and the understandings with which we launched the negotiations. I'm concerned about their progress because I see the Palestinians continuing with incitement, continuing to create artificial crises, continue to avoid, run away from the historic decisions that are needed to make a genuine peace.

    I hope that your visit will help steer them back to a place where we could achieve the historical peace that we seek and that our people need. And I welcome you again.

    Secretary Kerry: Well, Prime Minister, thank you very much, thank you, Bibi, for again making time and being here to be part of this really critical process.

    We are in the Rabin suite here, and last night I had the privilege of visiting the site where violence took the life of a great prime minister who was moving towards peace, and I've often heard President Clinton talk about the meaning of that loss and that moment of the loss of an opportunity for peace, so I'm honored to be in the Rabin suite, meeting with the Prime Minister of Israel at a moment where we are in critical talks with respect to the possibilities of a long, long sought goal here in the Middle East. Israel deserves security, it deserves to live in peace. The Palestinians deserve a state, they deserve to live in peace, and that is what we are working towards.

    This is a moment where there are many issues of great consequence on the table. As I sit here, a team is arriving in Geneva and they will be negotiating tomorrow at the P5+1 on Iran, on the very topic that Bibi just raised. Our goal is an Iran that has only a peaceful nuclear program, and indeed we must make certain, it is incumbent on us, a responsibility of the world, to know with certainty that it is a peaceful program and there is no capacity to produce a weapon of mass destruction. That's our goal. And as I have said many times, no deal is better than a bad deal. We will not make a bad deal, if a deal can be made at all, and we will be pursuing that carefully. Even as we are here, we're also meeting in Geneva and in other efforts to try to move forward in Syria. The impact of Syria on this region cannot be overstated. Massive numbers of refugees, enormous violence, now the potential of disease, polio, a breakdown of the health system and perhaps even, if we don’t succeed, the destruction of the State of Syria with all of those dangerous implications.

    And then of course finally, this issue of peace between Israel and the Palestinians. We are now three months into this negotiation. There are always difficulties, always tensions. I am very confident of our ability to work through them, that's why I'm here. We will spend serious time this morning, I will meet with President Abbas this afternoon. Again this evening, the Prime Minister and I and his team will share a working dinner and we'll work as late as it takes and again tomorrow I will be here in the region and working on this. So I hope that we will continue in the good faith which brought the parties together in the first place. This can be achieved with good faith, with a serious effort on both sides, to make real compromises and hard decisions. This can be achieved.

    President Obama sees a road ahead, as do I, and we share a belief in this process or we wouldn’t put this time into it. So I look forward to the conversations we'll have beginning today and I respect everybody's patience with us that we are not talking every day about what we're doing, we need the space to negotiate privately, secretly, quietly, and we will continue to do that. We have six months ahead of us on the timetable we've set for ourselves, and I'm confident that we have the ability to make progress.

    Thank you.