Italian FM: Even a 'Rational' Nuclear Iran Would be a Threat
Italian FM Giulio Terzi di Sant'Agata said that even if Iran acted rationally with nuclear weapons, Tehran would still pose a threat.
By David Lev
First Publish: 3/14/2013, 6:31 PM
The Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iran
AFP/Mehr News/File
Iran was not just Israel's problem, the
Foreign Minister said. “In the end, however 'regional' the trigger, a
nuclear crisis will always have a global impact. Should Tehran acquire
nuclear capabilities, others would follow and the Middle East - the very
doorstep of Europe - would enter this new regional nuclear race.”
Addressing the ongoing bloodshed in Syria, di Sant'Agata told Herzliya Conference
participants that “we can no longer afford delays in our action. No
example is better than Syria to remind us that the Assad regime and its
allies do not necessarily act under similar constraints. We are
witnessing the emergence of fast-rising economic and military powers, in
different regions, which pursue their interest with the power of a State and the flexibility of a non-state actor. These are decades of asymmetric diplomacy.”
The Italian Foreign Minister concluded by
pointing to Israel as a regional stabilizer, stating that “Israel not
only lies at their geographical center. It is also at their front line.
As the dust settles, and room grows for new ideas, Israel will be the
first and foremost engine of a new path towards a more secure and peaceful Middle East.”
The annual Herzliya Conference is the
flagship event of the Institute of Policy and Strategy (IPS) at the
Lauder School of Government of IDC Herzliya. The Herzliya Conference addresses Israel’s national
agenda by encouraging public debate and influencing the country’s
public policy planning. Generally held in February, the even this year
was postponed in order to accommodate the Knesset elections.
Labels: Communications, Conflict, Defence, Human Relations, Iran, Islamism, Israel, Italy, Middle East, Nuclear Technology, Security
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