<http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/13/international/middleeast/13nuke.html?th=&emc=th&pagewanted=print&position=>

The New York Times

April 13, 2005

Sharon Asks U.S. to Pressure Iran to Give Up Its Nuclear Program
 By DAVID E. SANGER


ASHINGTON, April 12 - Spreading photographs of Iranian nuclear sites over a
lunch table at the Bush ranch in Texas on Monday, Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon of Israel urged President Bush to step up pressure on Iran to give
up all elements of its nuclear program, according to senior American and
Israeli officials.

 Mr. Sharon said Israeli intelligence showed Iran was near "a point of no
return" in learning how to develop a weapon, the officials said. However,
Mr. Sharon gave no indication that Israel was preparing to act alone to
attack Iranian nuclear facilities, a prospect that Vice President Dick
Cheney, who was at the lunch, raised publicly three months ago.

In a conversation lasting more than an hour, Mr. Sharon argued that
European nations negotiating with Iran were softening their position and
may be willing to allow it to hold on to technology to enrich uranium.

 American officials said the evidence Mr. Sharon presented, including
aerial photographs of sites in Iran, was neither startling nor new to Mr.
Bush. But they said the prime minister was clearly pressuring Mr. Bush not
to allow the European negotiations with Iran to drag on.

"The Israelis consider the Iranians a big threat and they saw this as
another opportunity to convey that to the president," an American official
said. But among American experts familiar with the latest Israeli imagery,
the official added, "no one thinks this was earth-shattering stuff."

 Israeli officials declined to describe the evidence they presented, or say
whether the photographs were from Israeli or American sources, commercial
satellites, or from agents on the ground in Iran.

Nonetheless, Mr. Sharon's extended conversation - bolstered by the Israeli
photographs and intelligence presented by his chief military aide, Brig.
Gen. Yaakov Galant - showed tension between Israel and its biggest ally
over how much time is available to deal with the issue.

While American and Israeli officials insisted Tuesday that they were in
total agreement about the nature of the Iranian threat, Israel has
interpreted the evidence that the two countries share in what one official
called "the worst-case scenario." In describing the Iranians as on the cusp
of a "point of no return," officials said, Mr. Sharon was arguing to Mr.
Bush that once Iran solves some remaining technical hurdles, there will be
no effective way of stopping it from ultimately building a weapon - even if
that day is years away.

"This can't be delayed much longer," a senior Israeli official traveling in
Mr. Sharon's party said Tuesday. "There is very little time until the point
of no return is reached."

 American officials have interpreted the evidence differently. While they
have accused Iran of running a secret weapons program - under the cover of
plans to build nuclear power plants for electricity - they have told
Congress that any weapon is likely to be several years away. In the most
recent public testimony on the subject, on Feb. 16, Vice Adm. Lowell E.
Jacoby, the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, told Congress that
"unless constrained by a nuclear nonproliferation agreement, Tehran
probably will have the ability to produce nuclear weapons early in the next
decade."

 Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy
Agency, said in February in the German magazine Der Spiegel that if Iran
had "decided to operate a secret nuclear weapons program - for which we, as
I mentioned, have not found any evidence to date - they are likely to have
a bomb in two to three years. They certainly have the know-how and the
industrial infrastructure."

The White House said Monday that the subject of Iran came up over lunch,
but it made no mention of the intelligence that was presented, and gave no
details of the conversation. Israeli radio and other news reports in Israel
gave more details earlier Tuesday, prompting American and Israeli officials
to speak about the interchanges more openly.

The subtext of the conversation is an increasing concern within the
administration that Israel might act pre-emptively, as it did in 1981 when
it attacked Iraq's nuclear reactor at Osirak.

 While American officials have rarely discussed that possibility openly,
Mr. Cheney talked about it in an interview on MSNBC on Inauguration Day.
"If, in fact, the Israelis became convinced the Iranians had a significant
nuclear capability," he said, "given the fact that Iran has a stated policy
that their objective is the destruction of Israel, the Israelis might well
decide to act first, and let the rest of the world worry about cleaning up
the diplomatic mess afterwards."

Mr. Sharon made no such threat at the lunch, officials said, and a senior
Israeli official said Tuesday in Washington that "it is not Israel's job to
lead this effort." The official warned that "what is worrisome is that
there are several European countries that are beginning to think that Iran
will be a member of the club, and that is a grave danger."

Mr. Sharon, officials said, made it clear to administration officials
during his visit that he has little confidence in the outcome of the
negotiations under way by Iran and three European nations - Britain, France
and Germany. Iran has insisted that it has the right to enrich uranium
under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, and will not give up that right.
While there is disagreement among the Europeans themselves, they seem more
willing to allow some uranium enrichment, under strict monitoring.

 The United States has argued that because Iran hid so many elements of its
nuclear program from the International Atomic Energy Agency for 17 years,
it cannot be trusted.

"If you think that they've been running a secret weapons program, which is
what we believe and the Israelis believe, than what kind of inspection
system could work?" a senior American diplomat said Tuesday.

The session at the ranch also included some references to Iran's growing
missile program, which gives it the ability to reach Israel. Admiral
Jacoby, in his February testimony, noted that Iran already has medium-range
missiles "capable of reaching Tel Aviv," and he said that by 2015, it may
have "the technical capability" to develop an intercontinental ballistic
missile. But he noted that "it is not clear whether Iran has decided to
field such a missile."

Recently the new president of the Ukraine, Viktor A. Yushchenko, said his
government had discovered evidence that the country's previous leadership
secretly sold to Iran and China cruise missiles that can carry a nuclear
warhead. Iran has denied it made any such purchases.

David S. Cloud contributed reporting from Washington for this article and
Steven Erlanger from Israel.

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