On Thursday speaking to new graduates of the Israeli Air Force, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued new last-minute warnings on the nuclear agreement with Iran. As the June 30 deadline for the deal is just days away, the Israeli PM said the West is making too many concessions and paving the way for Iran to be his country's "top threat." But he says there is still enough time to make a good deal.
"[The West] could still come to their senses," said Netanyahu. "It's still not too late to insist on a good agreement, and certainly not too late not to promote a bad agreement."
But he is warning that concessions are only making Iran's desire to become a nuclear power more intense. "These concessions increase Iran's appetite, and every day, they come and further raise their requirements in order to squeeze more concessions from them," the prime minister said.
"This agreement is fundamentally flawed," he added, "leaving the path to achieving Iran's arsenal of nuclear bombs within a decade."
Netanyahu outlined several other areas of concern as was reported by Arutz Sheva:
It allows [Iran] to break into being a nuclear power earlier by breaking supervision agreements.
It gives it tens of billions of dollars instantly, through which Iran will increase its subversive activities, its conquests and its terror against Israel, the Middle East and beyond.
"I repeat it now: no agreement is better than a bad agreement," Netanyahu warned, but insisted that no matter the outcome, "Israel will always protect itself, and the IAF is a big part of that."
Arutz Sheva also reports that secret documents were leaked Wednesday that show that America, Britain, France, and China "have conceded to give Iran state-of-the-art nuclear equipment and help build its nuclear facilities."


