World Jewish News
A nuclear facility under construction inside a mountain located about 20 miles north northeast of Qom, Iran. Photo by: AP
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Israeli officials will not warn the United States if they decide to attack Iran's nuclear infrastructure, the Associated Pr
28.02.2012 Israeli officials will not warn the United States if they decide to attack Iran's nuclear infrastructure, the Associated Press reported, citing an unnamed U.S. intelligence official.
The decision was passed on in a series of private, top-level conversations, the news service reported Tuesday.
The Israeli officials cited by the American source said that they would not tell the Obama administration so that Iran would not hold the U.S. responsible for failing to stop the Israeli attack, according to the AP.
Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak, have met in recent weeks in Israel with several high-ranking U.S. visitors, dispatched according to some reports, to convince Israel not to attack Iran, and to allow tough sanctions and international pressure to do its work.
Barak is currently in Washington for meetings with his counterpart Leon Panetta, and other key U.S. security officials. Netanyahu is scheduled to meet next week with President Obama.
The U.S. official also told the AP that Israel is providing "key information" on Syria now that the U.S. has closed its embassy and pulled all of its diplomats and intelligence officials from the country.
JTA
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