By Barak Ravid and Shahar Ilan
Haaretz Correspondents and Haaretz Service
16/05/08 "Haaretz " -- - The United States and Israel agree on the need for "tangible action" to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's spokesman said Friday, after a visit by U.S. President George W. Bush.
"We are on the same page. We both see the threat ... And we both understand that tangible action is required to prevent the Iranians from moving forward on a nuclear weapon," Olmert spokesman Mark Regev said.
Regev described diplomatic efforts so far to exert pressure on Iran as "positive", but added: "It is clearly not sufficient and it's clear that additional steps will have to be taken".
Asked about the
option of using
military force,
Regev said:
"Leaders of many
countries have
talked about
many options
being on the
table and, of
course, Israel
agrees with
that."
Senior officials
in Jerusalem
said Thursday
that Israel is
fully satisfied
with the results
of Bush's visit,
including policy
on Iran's
nuclear program.
"In talks with
the president of
the United
States during
his visit it was
made clear that
Bush's
statements on
the subject of
Iran's nuclear
program are
fully backed in
practice," a
senior official
said.
The president's
attitude on Iran
was well known
in Israel, and
the expectation
had been that he
would use
forceful
language against
Tehran, both
during talks
with Israeli
officials and in
his address to
the Knesset, not
only on the
nuclear question
but on Iran's
role in the
region.
During meetings
with Olmert and
Defense Minister
Ehud Barak, more
data was
presented to
back the desire
for a
reassessment of
an American
intelligence
report which
concluded that
Iran had halted
its nuclear
weapons program.
One Israeli
source said that
it is hoped that
the new
information
would influence
the
administration's
stance on Iran's
nuclear program.
The source said
that Olmert
would discuss
the subject
during his visit
to Washington in
two weeks.
President Bush
ended his
three-day visit
to Israel on
Friday and
headed for Saudi
Arabia.
The president
and First Lady
Laura Bush flew
out of Tel
Aviv's
Ben-Gurion
Airport after a
morning at Bible
Lands Museum in
Jerusalem, where
they viewed
artifacts from
the time of
biblical
writings and
spoke with young
Israelis about
hopes for peace.
Bush: Masada
shall never fall
again
In his address
to the Knesset
on Thursday,
Bush promised
unflinching U.S.
support.
"Citizens of
Israel, Masada
shall never fall
again, and
America will
always stand
with you," he
said.
Bush added that
calls for
negotiations
with Iranian
President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad are
akin to the
efforts to
appease Hitler
before World War
II.
The president
opened his
speech by saying
in Hebrew:
"Happy
Independence
Day." His
address focused
on the alliance
between the U.S.
and Israel.
"Israel's
population may
be just over 7
million. But
when you
confront terror
and evil, you
are 307 million
strong, because
America stands
with you," Bush
said.
"You have raised
a modern society
in the Promised
Land, a light
unto the nations
that preserves
the legacy of
Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob. And
you have built a
mighty democracy
that will endure
forever and can
always count on
America to stand
at its side."
He noted that
Israel's
Declaration of
Independence
"was the
redemption of an
ancient promise
given to
Abraham, Moses,
and David - a
homeland for the
chosen people in
Eretz Yisrael."
The president
also presented
his vision of
Israel in the
next 60 years.
"Israel will be
celebrating its
120th
anniversary as
one of the
world's great
democracies, a
secure and
flourishing
homeland for the
Jewish people."
His address was
interrupted no
less than 14
times by loud
applause.
"America stands
with you in
breaking up
terrorist
networks and
denying the
extremists
sanctuary. And
America stands
with you in
firmly opposing
Iran's nuclear
weapons
ambitions.
Permitting the
world's leading
sponsor of
terror to
possess the
world's
deadliest weapon
would be an
unforgivable
betrayal of
future
generations. For
the sake of
peace, the world
must not allow
Iran to have a
nuclear weapon,"
the president
said.
Bush accused
Ahmadinejad of
seeking to
return the
Middle East to
the Middle Ages
by calling for
the destruction
of Israel.
"Some seem to
believe we
should negotiate
with terrorists
and radicals, as
if some
ingenious
argument will
persuade them
they have been
wrong all
along," he said.
"We have heard
this foolish
delusion before.
As Nazi tanks
crossed into
Poland in 1939,
an American
senator
declared: 'Lord,
if only I could
have talked to
Hitler, all of
this might have
been avoided.'
We have an
obligation to
call this what
it is � the
false comfort of
appeasement,
which has been
repeatedly
discredited by
history."
After the speech
made by German
Chancellor
Angela Merkel to
the Knesset in
March, it was
hard to expect a
more pro-Zionist
speech. But as a
former Knesset
speaker, MK
Reuven Rivlin,
put it Thursday,
"I wish our
leaders would
make speeches
like this."
Rivlin described
Bush as
"manifesting the
Zionist vision."
Contrary to the
applause Bush
received for his
address, the
speech by Prime
Minister Olmert
was less popular
and stirred
considerable
controversy.
Olmert promised
that when there
is a peace
agreement it
"will be
approved by a
large majority
in the Knesset
and it will be
supported by the
vast majority of
the Israeli
public."
Two MKs from the
National Union,
Zvi Hendel and
Uri Ariel, left
the plenum in
protest,
complaining that
the event was
"used to promote
a political
agenda that is
opposed by most
of the Israeli
public."
Hendel issued a
statement
calling on
Olmert "to learn
from the
president of the
United States
what Zionism
is."
MK Aryeh Eldad
(National Union)
called out
during Olmert's
speech, "in your
dreams."
He later
proposed that
Bush should
replace Olmert.
Throughout the
exchanges amount
the rival
Israeli
politicians,
President Bush
appeared to be
enjoying
himself. When
Knesset speaker
Dalia Itzik
finished her
speech, he
offered his hand
in a "give me
five" kind of
love.
Olmert diverged
from his speech
and said that
"we will bring
before the
Knesset an
agreement that
is based on the
vision of two
states for two
peoples. This
agreement will
be approved by a
large majority
in the Knesset
and the entire
nation."
On Iran, Olmert
said that "the
seriousness of
the threat
demands that no
means be
discounted."
However, he made
it clear that "a
uniform
international
political and
economic front
against Iran is
currently in
place, and
tougher and more
effective
sanctions are a
necessary stage,
even if it is
not the final
stage, on the
right way to
block the
Iranian threat."
