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svgadminsvgMarch 19, 2015svgNews

Netanyahu: Israel May Accept Some Iran Centrifuges

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu suggested Thursday his country might accept Iran having a small number of centrifuges, but insisted world powers could strike a better nuclear deal with Tehran than one now under negotiation.

“I think you can get a better deal. The one I would have is to reduce Iran’s nuclear capabilities so you increase the breakout time,” the Israeli leader told NBC television.

“I mean, if I had a vote on that negotiating team, I would say zero centrifuges,” he said, when asked about reports that the Islamic Republic might be left with about 6,000 centrifuges.

The highly sophisticated machines spin uranium gas at supersonic speeds to make it suitable for power generation as well as for use at high purities for an atomic bomb.

Iran currently has about 19,000 centrifuges, of which just over 10,000 are operational, and Netanyahu has repeatedly called for Iran’s entire nuclear capability to be dismantled.

Pressed by NBC on whether he would accept some centrifuges, Netanyahu replied: “I would say that a smaller number would be something that Israel and its Arab neighbors wouldn’t love, but could live with.”

“The most important thing is that the lifting of restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program would depend on Iran’s change of behavior. That it would stop supporting terrorism, stop its aggression against just about every country in the region, and stop calling and threatening the annihilation of Israel.”

Press reports earlier Thursday had indicated that a draft document was already being circulated in the talks in Switzerland between Iran and six major powers, which would leave Tehran with about 6,000 centrifuges.

But US officials shot down the report. Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken told lawmakers: “My understanding is that there is no draft, that that report is erroneous.”

Iran and the United States, China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany are in talks to try to agree by March 31 on the outlines of a deal and finalize it by the end of June.

Netanyahu had angered the US administration by giving a passionate speech earlier this month to Congress, blasting the deal under negotiation.

Despite sharp criticism from the administration, he told NBC that he had had “very good feedback” from both Democrats and Republicans to his speech as well as from around the world, including Arab countries.

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