Middle East : Peres Says U.S. Must Put All Iran Options on Table
Days before Israel’s president, Shimon Peres, was to meet with President Obama, Mr. Peres said on Thursday that the United States must make clear to Iran
that “all options are on the table,” but he acknowledged that there was
disagreement over where to draw the “red line” that would set off
military intervention.
“We need a total and clear commitment that
the catastrophe of Iran will not create an impossible situation,” Mr.
Peres said in an hourlong interview at a Manhattan hotel. “If you can
achieve it by economic and political measures, yes, that’s the best way
to start. But in order that the Iranians will take it seriously, you
have to say, ‘Gentlemen, we’ll try the way which may be the best, but
all the other options are on the table.’
“You have to be decisive,” he said. “You have to make a choice.”
Mr.
Peres — who at 88 has held virtually every post in Israeli government
and in defining his current role said, “The prime minister is to rule,
the president is to charm” — is scheduled to see Mr. Obama on Sunday.
The prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, meets Mr. Obama on Monday.
Though
the Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz reported last week that Mr. Peres
planned to tell Mr. Obama he did not believe Israel should make a
unilateral strike against Iran, on Thursday Mr. Peres suggested that if
the White House was not resolute, Israel might have to go it alone.
“This is an unavoidable situation,” he said. “It’s not exactly the Nazi situation, but my God, what a catastrophe.”
In a wide-ranging conversation that touched on the Palestinian
conflict, the Arab Spring, Israeli cultural identity, racial
discrimination, economic globalization and the Ten Commandments, Mr.
Peres repeatedly invoked the importance of technology and a young
generation, declaring at one point that “all ideologies are practically
dead.” Despite the radical transformations in the politics of the
countries surrounding his, Mr. Peres, who shared the 1994 Nobel Peace
Prize for his role in the Oslo Accords, said that he still believed in
discreet diplomacy as a path to peace, and that he continued to have
meetings on all sides about the prospects for a two-state solution.
“I
can say jokingly that peace and love are alike: you cannot achieve
either of them unless you close your eyes,” he said. “Negotiation is not
a matter of give and take. Every solution that exists is dead. If you
have two solutions, don’t waste the time in trying to convince the other
party about your solution. Try to create a third solution, which is
unknown.”
Regarding Egypt, Mr. Peres said that the Muslim
Brotherhood “won the Parliament; they didn’t win the situation,” adding
that “the real problem of Egypt and the Middle East is poverty, not
politics.” He avoided addressing the rise of political Islamists around
the region in the wake of popular uprisings.
The interview took
place in a suite at the Regency Hotel, surrounded by guards and behind a
bulletproof pane they had placed in front of a window, a vase of
flowers sandwiched between them on the sill. It came amid his new
Facebook campaign, “Be My Friends for Peace,” yet the conversation was
infused with his long perspective.
“When I remember those days,
Israel was not a state, Israel was a doubt,” he recalled. “When I
compare the present situation with the then-existing situation, then we
were more desperate. My heart doesn’t fall easily. I am talking out of
experience.”
Friday, March 2, 2012
Middle East : Peres Says U.S. Must Put All Iran Options on Table
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