Israel thanks US for blocking UN nuclear disarmament move
Sat May 23, 2015 9:56PM
US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) shakes hands
with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at his office in Israel.
(AP file photo)
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has thanked the United States for
blocking a UN measure that could have forced Israel to disclose its
arsenal of nuclear weapons.
More than 150 countries
participated in a month-long conference in New York reviewing the 1970
nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) aimed at preventing the spread of
nuclear weapons and weapons technology.
Late on Friday, after
four weeks of negotiations at the United Nations on ways to improve
compliance with the NPT, the United States announced that there was "no
agreement" and accused Arab countries of torpedoing the nuclear
disarmament negotiations.
US
Arms Control Under Secretary Rose Gottemoeller told the NPT conference
on Friday that the language on the final NPT review document was
"incompatible with our long-standing policies”.The
talks ended in failure after the US and its allies, including Canada
and Britain rejected a proposal made by Arab countries to establish a
nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East by March 2016.
On
Saturday, Netanyahu spoke with US Secretary of State John Kerry and
asked him to convey his gratitude to President Barack Obama for the
stance the US took at the NPT review conference.
Israel is not a
party to the treaty and has never publicly declared what is widely
considered to be an extensive nuclear weapons program. However, it
attended the conference as an observer.
Israel is believed to be
the sole possessor of a nuclear arsenal in the Middle East with more
than 200 undeclared nuclear warheads.
Israel’s nuclear weapons facility in the Negev desert viewed from satellite.Tel
Aviv has rejected global calls to join the NPT and does not allow
international inspectors to observe its controversial nuclear program.
GJH/GJH