Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger Slams Talks to Renew Iran Nuclear Deal

(Spectator-UK) Andrew Roberts - Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, 99, said in an interview: "I was extremely doubtful about the original nuclear agreement. I thought Iran's promises would be very difficult to verify, and that the talks really created a pattern in which the nuclear build-up might have been slowed down a little but made more inevitable. As a result, countries in the region, particularly Israel - Iran's chief enemy - but also Egypt and Saudi Arabia - whom they see as principal competitors - were going to be driven into reactions which might make the situation much more explosive." "Now, the trouble with the existing nuclear talks is that it is very dangerous to go back to an agreement that was inadequate to begin with - to modify it in a direction that makes it apparently more tolerable to the adversary. So all the concerns I had with the original agreement, I'm going to have now." "There is really no alternative to the elimination of an Iranian nuclear force. There is no way you can have peace in the Middle East with nuclear weapons in Iran, because before that happens, there is a high danger of pre-emption by Israel, because Israel cannot wait for deterrents."


2022-07-04 00:00:00

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