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Chinese Online Class - Bush doesn't fear attack on Iran - Israeli envoy

WORLD / Middle East

Bush doesn't fear attack on Iran - Israeli envoy

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-15 16:59

JERUSALEM - US President George W. Bush will not hesitate to use military
force against Iran if other options fail, Israel's outgoing ambassador to
the United States said in an interview published on Wednesday.

"I know President Bush well ... From his standpoint, a nuclear Iran,
ayatollahs with a bomb, is unacceptable," Danny Ayalon told Israel's
Ma'ariv newspaper.

"I have been privileged to know him well, he will not hesitate to go all
the way if there is no choice."

Concern over Iran's atomic ambitions figured prominently in talks in
Washington this week between Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.

The US and allies including Israel have accused Iran of pursuing nuclear
weapons under the guise of a civilian energy programme. Iran denies the
accusation.

Ayalon, who has spent the past 4-1/2 years in Washington, said Bush would
continue to pursue diplomatic efforts for now, and failing that would
chose to try to isolate Iran via sanctions.

But if that tactic also failed to stem Iran's nuclear plans, Ayalon said
Bush would likely use air power combined with limited ground forces to
attack Iran.

"Anyone who knows President Bush knows that he is very determined. He is
convinced of the moral supremacy of democracies over dictatorships ... If
the sanctions succeed, all the better. Otherwise, he will act by all
means possible, including military action," he said.

In public, Bush has said he backs a diplomatic solution with Iran but has
refused to rule out a military strike.

The Islamic republic has said it is willing to talk to the US, but that
Washington must first "change its attitude".

Asked if the United States would be capable of taking military action
against Iran, given that it is already engaged in a debilitating conflict
in Iraq, Ayalon said:

"This is not an operation on the same scale. There is no intention of
employing large ground forces. That is not the model. This is more a case
of employing air power combined with limited ground forces."

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