INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he would likely seek a commitment from Iran to end its nuclear ambitions at talks next week and
strikes on Iran with bringing a swift end to the war between Israel and Tehran.
Trump said his decision to unleash huge bunker-busting bombs
in Sunday’s attack had devastated Iran’s nuclear program and called the outcome “a victory for everybody”, Reuters reported.
“It
It was obliteration,” he said, shrugging off an initial assessment by the U.S
Defense Intelligence Agency that Iran’s path to building a nuclear weapon may have been set back only by months.
Meanwhile, anxious
Iranians and Israelis sought to resume normal life after 12 days of the most intense confrontation ever between the two foes and a ceasefire
that took effect Tuesday.
Speaking in The Hague where he attended a NATO summit on Wednesday, Trump said he did not see Iran again engaging
in nuclear weapons development
Tehran has for decades denied accusations by Western leaders that it is seeking nuclear arms.
“We’re going to talk to them next week,
To me, I don’t think it’s that necessary,” Trump said.
“I’ll tell you, the last thing they want to do is enrich anything right now
They want to recover,” he said, referring to Western accusations that Iran has been enriching uranium to near-weapons-grade purity.
Later
Central Intelligence Agency Director John Ratcliffe said in a statement that the U.S
air strikes had “severely damaged” Iran’s nuclear program, but he stopped short of declaring that the program had been destroyed.
The
agency confirmed a “body of credible evidence” that several key Iranian facilities were destroyed and would take years to rebuild, he
said.
Israel’s nuclear agency assessed the strikes had “set back Iran’s ability to develop nuclear weapons by many years”
The White House also circulated the Israeli assessment, although Trump said he was not relying on Israeli intelligence.
Trump said he was
confident Tehran would pursue a diplomatic path towards reconciliation
The president gave no details on the discussions next week such as the venue and participants.
If Iran tried to rebuild its nuclear
programme, “we won’t let that happen
Number one, militarily we won’t,” he said, adding that he thought “we’ll end up having something of a relationship with Iran” to
resolve the issue.
The head of the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog, Rafael Grossi, dismissed what he called the “hourglass approach” of
assessing damage to Iran’s nuclear programme in terms of months needed to rebuild as besides the point for an issue that needed a
long-term solution.
“In any case, the technological knowledge is there and the industrial capacity is there
So we need to work together with them,” he said
His priority was returning international inspectors to Iranian nuclear sites, which he said was the only way to find out precisely what
state they were in.
IRAN PRESIDENT HINTS AT DOMESTIC REFORMS
Israel’s bombing campaign, launched with a surprise attack on June 13, wiped
out the top echelon of Iran’s military leadership and killed leading nuclear scientists
Iran responded with missiles that pierced Israel’s defences in large numbers for the first time.
Iranian authorities said 627 people were
killed and nearly 5,000 injured in Iran, where the extent of the damage could not be independently confirmed because of tight restrictions
Twenty-eight people were killed in Israel.
Israel claimed to have achieved its goals of destroying Iran’s nuclear sites and missiles; Iran
claimed to have forced the end of the war by penetrating Israeli defences.
Israel’s demonstration that it could target Iran’s senior
leadership seemingly at will posed perhaps the biggest challenge yet for Iran’s clerical rulers, at a critical juncture when they must
find a successor for Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, now 86 and in power for 36 years.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, a relative moderate
elected last year in a challenge to years of dominance by hardliners, said it could result in reform.
“This war and the empathy that it
fostered between the people and officials is an opportunity to change the outlook of management and the behaviour of officials so that they
can create unity,” he said in a statement carried by state media.
Still, Iran’s authorities moved swiftly to demonstrate their control
The judiciary announced the execution of three men on Wednesday convicted of collaborating with Israel’s Mossad spy agency and smuggling
equipment used in an assassination
Iran had arrested 700 people accused of ties with Israel during the conflict, the state-affiliated Nournews reported.
During the war, both
Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump publicly suggested that it could end with the toppling of Iran’s entire system of
clerical rule, established in its 1979 revolution.
But after the ceasefire, Trump said he did not want to see “regime change” in Iran,
which he said would bring chaos at a time when he wanted the situation to settle down.
RELIEF, APPREHENSION, EXHAUSTION
In both Iran and
Israel, residents expressed relief at the end of the fighting, but also apprehension.
“We came back after the ceasefire was announced
People are relieved that the war has stopped, but there’s a lot of uncertainty about what comes next,” said Farah, 67, who returned to
Tehran from nearby Lavasan, where she had fled to escape Israeli bombing.
In Tel Aviv, Rony Hoter-Ishay Meyer, 38, said the war’s end
brought mixed emotions: relief that children could return to school and normal life resume, but exhaustion from the stress.
“Those past
two weeks were catastrophic in Israel, and we are very much exhausted and we need to get back to our normal energy.”
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US to hold nuclear talks with Iran next week first appeared on TINS News | Afghanistan News.