Tel Aviv will never agree to the nuclearization of its neighbors.
According to Al-Mayadin, the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quoted him as saying that Tel Aviv will never agree to the nuclearization of its neighbors.
The Hebrew-language website Walla reported that Netanyahu announced that the Zionist regime will never agree to one of its neighbors having a nuclear program.
The statement of Netanyahu’s office states: This has been and will be part of Israel’s policies.
This statement was issued after the recent interview of Ron Dermer, Minister of Strategic Affairs of the Zionist regime, with the American PBS network. Dermer announced in this interview that the Zionist regime is ready to agree to Saudi Arabia’s peaceful nuclear program under certain conditions.
Previously, the Zionist media said in early August that Saudi Arabia is setting conditions for normalizing relations with Tel Aviv, including obtaining the consent of the Zionist regime for uranium enrichment, building a nuclear reactor for peaceful purposes, establishing a defense alliance between Riyadh and Washington, and There are other conditions that will be almost impossible for Tel Aviv to accept.
A spokesperson of the US Foreign Ministry confirmed in a conversation with the Zionist newspaper “Israel Hum” that despite the intense efforts made by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and American diplomats over the past few months, there is little chance of reaching an agreement. There is normalization between Tel Aviv and Riyadh.
The report of the Zionist newspaper “Israel Hum” states that “Israel” and Saudi Arabia are currently not close to a normalization agreement.
The spokesperson of the US Department of State told the mentioned Zionist newspaper after the meeting between US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken and Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer that Tel Aviv and Saudi Arabia are nowhere close to reaching a normalization agreement. They are not and the differences are still valid.
The spokesman of the US State Department, who did not disclose his name, Israel Hume, also said: “It is too early to say that we are close to any agreement.” He noted: “There are issues that the two sides must solve by themselves.”