29-03-2024 03:47 AM Jerusalem Timing

Netanyahu on Upcoming Deal with Iran: Bad One

Netanyahu on Upcoming Deal with Iran: Bad One

Netanyahu accused Iran on Sunday of backtracking on several issues agreed upon during negotiations with the international community and reiterated his stance that an upcoming agreement is a "bad one."

Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin NetanyahuThe Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused Iran on Sunday of backtracking on several issues agreed upon during negotiations with the international community and reiterated his stance that an upcoming agreement is a 'bad one' and should be rejected.

"Iran has announced that it will not allow surprise visits at its military installations on the nuclear issue," Netanyahu said on Sunday at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting, according to a statement from his office.

"It has also backtracked from other issues that were seemingly agreed upon in the framework agreement," he added.

The Zionist PM, dubbed in the Occupied Territories as Bibi, added that despite these reports of Iran's "obduracy," members of the P5+1 countries (Russia, China, Germany, France, the U.S. and Britain) continue to make "concessions" towards them.

"The agreement being formulated has looked bad from the onset and it seems to be getting worse from day to day," Netanyahu reiterated, adding that it's "not too late" to reject the agreement and "insist on a better one."

Netanyahu's statements mainly refer to statements made by Iranian President Sheikh Hassan Rouhani on Saturday, who said that the Islamic Republic will resist efforts to compromise its nuclear and military secrets through supervision.

"Iran would never allow its secrets to be disclosed through the implementation of the Additional Protocol, not in the nuclear sector or in other areas," Rouhani said.

The Additional Protocol of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), on which 125 states, including Iran, signed, allows IAEA to visit nuclear sites with up to two hours' notice.

Sheikh Rouhani said that he does not wholly object to the additional protocol, but added that nowhere in the protocol does it mention the word inspections.

On Monday, a Zionist delegation will head to Washington D.C. in order to try and influence US officials with the Zionist input on various clauses in the framework agreement announced by the P5+1 and Iran in April, ahead of the June 30 deadline to ink the final deal based on that framework.

Earlier this month, the head of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) John Brennan made a secret visit to the Zionist entity in order to calm the occupation authorities ahead of the final agreement, Zionist media outlets reported.

On the same topic, the Wall Street Journal reported last Wednesday that the Zionist authorities used a computer virus in order to eavesdrop on the Iranian nuclear talks.