Panetta: Sanctions not moving Iran away from
nukes
By Robert Burns
Associated
Press Monday July 30, 2012
U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta acknowledged today that
increasingly stiff international sanctions have yet to compel Iran to
give up its nuclear ambitions. But he argued that more pressure
eventually would lead Iran to "do what's right."
Iran's disputed nuclear program, which Tehran contends is only for
peaceful purposes, is a prominent backdrop to Panetta's five-day tour of
the Middle East and North Africa. On Wednesday he'll be in Israel, whose
leaders have said they are contemplating a military attack on Iran to
stop Iran from developing nuclear weapons, a step they view as a threat
to Israel's very existence.
The Obama administration wants Israel to give sanctions and diplomacy
more time to steer Iran off its nuclear course, although Panetta
repeated the administration's standard line that "all options" are on
the table in the event that non-military pressure does not work.
"These sanctions are having a serious impact in terms of the economy in
Iran," he told reporters during a visit to the North Africa American
Military Cemetery, where 2,841 U.S. servicemen killed in the North
Africa campaign against Nazi Germany in 1942-1943 are buried.
"And while the results of that may not be obvious at the moment, the
fact is that they have expressed a willingness to negotiate (with the
U.S., Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China) and they continue to
seem interested in trying to find a diplomatic solution," he said.
Those on-again, off-again negotiations have not come close to resolving
a problem that U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has
cast as one of the biggest failures of the Obama administration. Romney
was in Israel this week showing support for Israel and asserting that if
he were president Iran would never get the atomic bomb.
Panetta, who has declined to comment on Romney's visit to Israel, stuck
to his argument that the administration's current approach is the right
one.
"What we all need to do is to continue the pressure on Iran,
economically and diplomatically ... to negotiate and to ultimately do
what's right in joining the international family," he added.
After meeting in Tunis with the country's new Islamist leaders, Panetta
was headed to Egypt for talks with its new Islamist president, Mohammed
Morsi, in Cairo, as well as Egyptian military leader Field Marshal
Mohammed Hussein Tantawi.
In his remarks at the U.S. military cemetery, Panetta said Washington
plans to promote closer counterterrorism cooperation with Tunisia's new
leaders. Panetta's press secretary, George Little, said the Pentagon
chief also raised the idea of more U.S. assistance in securing Tunisia's
border with Libya and in Tunisian maritime security. Little said
specifics were not discussed.
Little said the U.S. is worried about the spread of al-Qaida's influence
in North Africa, while adding that "the sense is that the threat here
(in Tunisia) is not as great as elsewhere" in the region.
Tunisia was the launching pad for the wave of revolt that swept through
the Arab world in 2011. It had one of the most repressive governments in
the region. The uprising began in December 2010 when a fruit vendor,
Mohammed Bouazizi, set himself on fire in the town of Sidi Bouzid to
protest his lack of economic opportunity and the disrespect of the
police.
The transition here from dictatorship to democracy has been smoother
than in neighboring countries like Libya and Egypt, with no power-hungry
military or armed militias to stifle the progress. But there is an
increasingly bold ultraconservative Muslim minority who want to turn
Tunisia into a strict Islamic state.
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