Israel's Netanyahu attacks 'dangerous Iranian tiger'
Israel's prime minister has launched a stinging attack on Iran, telling
a security conference in Munich it is the "greatest threat to our
world". Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would
"not allow Iran's regime to put a noose of terror around our neck". Mr
Netanyahu drew a parallel between the 1938 Munich Agreement, seen as a failed
attempt to appease Nazi Germany, and the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. He said the
deal had only "unleashed a dangerous Iranian tiger".
Mr Netanyahu accused Iran's foreign
minister and representative in Munich, Mohammad Javad Zarif, who is due to
address delegates later on Sunday, of being the "smooth-talking mouthpiece
of Iran's regime... [who] lies with eloquence". He said Iran was falsely
denying that it sent a drone into Israeli territory last week which was shot
down by Israeli forces. Holding up a remnant of what he said was the destroyed
drone, he addressed Mr Zarif directly: "Do you recognise it? You should,
it's yours. Don't test us." BBC correspondent Jonathan Marcus, at the
conference, says this theatricality was vintage Benjamin Netanyahu, from a
prime minister embattled at home with potential corruption charges looming over
his head.
Why
the recent spike in tensions?
The immediate trigger is last week's
confrontation - the first known direct engagement between the Israeli and
Iranian militaries. Israel launched raids against Iranian targets in Syria
after saying it had intercepted an Iranian drone crossing the Syria-Israel
border.
During the offensive, an Israeli F-16
fighter jet was shot down by Syrian air defences, its pilots ejecting in
northern Israel. It was believed to be the first time Israel had lost a jet in
combat since 2006. After the attack, Mr Netanyahu said Iran had "brazenly
violated Israel's sovereignty" and vowed that Israel would defend itself.
What
about in the longer term?
The rivalry between Iran and Israel
has been exacerbated in recent years by the regional instability - from the
toppling of Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq, which removed a counterweight to
Iranian regional power, to the ongoing proxy war being fought between many
different powers in Syria. Israel is a vocal opponent of the 2015 deal struck
between Iran and six world powers which lifted crippling sanctions in exchange
for curbs on Iran's nuclear programme.
Mr Netanyahu will be followed on to
the stage in Munich by Iran's Foreign Minister Zarif and it is a moot point who
will be the more welcome guest, says the BBC's Jonathan Marcus. While there is
strong support in Europe for the nuclear deal with Iran, there is a growing
sense in several capitals that more must be done to curb Iran's destabilising
regional role. It has emerged as one of the great victors from the chaos in
Syria.
How will
the speech be seen from Israel?
The
Israeli prime minister was speaking with the huge shadow of potential corruption charges hanging over his
head. He is likely to direct his Munich appearance as much at
his domestic audience as to the wider international community, our
correspondent says, insisting that he remains the essential leader for Israel
at a time of growing regional competition.
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