Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu invoked the threat of a second Holocaust Tuesday, as he urged the American Jewish community to demand that their congressional representatives oppose the nuclear deal with Iran.
“It wasn’t that long ago that the Jewish people failed to speak out in the face of mortal threats,” Netanyahu said in a live-streamed address hosted by the Jewish Federations of North America. “This is a time to stand up and be counted: Oppose this dangerous deal.”
For now, the Obama administration’s nuclear agreement has divided the American and Israeli Jewish communities. While Israeli Jews overwhelmingly oppose the deal, a survey conducted by the L.A. Jewish Journal found that 53% of American Jews want Congress to approve the agreement, while only 35% hope they will reject it.
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President Obama sought to solidify that support Tuesday afternoon by meeting privately with the leaders of several American Jewish groups at the White House.
One likely reason for American Jews’ current support of the deal is the community’s faith in the president who negotiated it. Obama won 69% of the Jewish vote in 2012, even as Netanyahu all but endorsed his Republican challenger, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.
In his address Tuesday, Netanyahu seemed to acknowledge the strength of Jewish support for the president, insisting that “this isn’t a partisan issue in Israel and it shouldn’t be a partisan issue in the United States,” while imploring American Jews to “judge the deal on its substance alone.”
The prime minister lambasted that substance, alleging that the deal “does not block Iran’s path to the bomb; it paves the way for Iran to get the bomb.” Netanyahu argued that even if Iran fully complies with the deal, it will have enough nuclear infrastructure left in place when the deal expires in 15 years to assemble a full arsenal of atomic weapons. And if the Iranians decide to secretly cheat on the deal, Netanyahu claimed they could get a single nuclear weapon even sooner.
Netanyahu argued that Iran would have little trouble hiding its nuclear proliferation from inspectors, due to a stipulation in the agreement that requires the United Nations to give the Iranian regime 24 days’ notice before examining a suspected nuclear site. Supporters of the deal have argued that no sovereign state would allow international inspectors to survey its military sites without some notice, and that it would be prohibitively difficult for the Iranians to uproot a nuclear site in that amount of time. But Netanyahu argued that 24 days is excessive, allowing more than enough opportunity for the Iranians to move or conceal evidence of illicit uranium enrichment.
“That’s like the police giving a drug dealer two and a half weeks to clean out his lab,” Netanyahu said. “You can flush a lot of nuclear meth down the toilet in 24 days.”
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