PM tells Romney: We need ‘strong and credible military threat’ against Iran
Romney: I listen to your views with ‘great seriousness.’ Republican presidential candidate says he’s honored to visit Jerusalem on Tisha B’Av and to ‘recognize the solemnity of the day and also the suffering of the Jewish people’
Raphael Ahren is a former diplomatic correspondent at The Times of Israel.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, in Jerusalem on Sunday, reiterating the need for a “strong” military threat to dissuade Iran from developing nuclear weapons.
“We have to be honest and say that all the sanctions and diplomacy so far have not set back the Iranian program by one iota,” Netanyahu said, welcoming Romney at the Prime Minister’s Office. “And that’s why I believe that we need a strong and credible military threat, coupled with the sanctions, to have a chance to change that situation.”
Romney, who arrived in Israel on Saturday as part of a three-country trip intended to boost his foreign policy credentials ahead of the November presidential elections, said he considers Netanyahu’s views on the Iranian threat “with great seriousness.”
He was looking forward to “chatting” with the prime minister “about further actions that we can take to dissuade Iran from their nuclear folly,” he added.
Romney also said he was curious to learn about the prime minister’s perspective regarding current developments in the region, such as in Syria and Egypt.
Earlier on Sunday, a top adviser to Romney’s campaign said a President Romney would back an Israeli attack on Iran. “If Israel has to take action on its own, in order to stop Iran from developing the capability, the governor would respect that decision,” Romney’s foreign policy adviser Dan Senor said.
‘Unfortunately, the tragedies of wanton killing are not only things of the past, but have darkened our skies in even more recent times’
During his second Israel visit in two years, the former Massachusetts governor showed awareness of the fact that many Israelis fast this Sunday to commemorate the destruction of both Jewish Temples and other catastrophes that befell the Jewish people through the ages.
“I’m honored to be here on the day of Tisha B’Av, to recognize the solemnity of the day and also the suffering of the Jewish people over the centuries and the millennia, and come with recognition of the sacrifices of so many,” Romney said. “Unfortunately, the tragedies of wanton killing are not only things of the past, but have darkened our skies in even more recent times.”
Romney had originally scheduled a fundraising dinner for Sunday night, right after the Tisha B’Av fast ends, but realizing the inappropriateness of the date his staff pushed the event off until Monday morning.
Romney canceled a planned meeting Sunday with Labor Party leader Shelly Yachimovich. Labor MK Isaac Herzog said he feared Romney had been “misled” by Netanyahu’s office, which didn’t want him to see the alternative Israeli leaderships.