Obama: A Nuclear Iran Inevitable Herb Keinon 04/06/2010 Jerusalem Post Original Source: – HYPERLINK http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Foreign-Policy/2010/0302/Bluster-at-UN-Human-Rights-Council-as-US-and-Iran-trade-barbs http://www.jpost.com/IranianThreat/News/Article.aspx?id=172488 It is inevitable that Iran will produce nuclear weapons, as things stand, US President Barack Obama said in an interview with The New York Times on Monday, seeming to indicate his administration was now resigned to a future including a nuclear-armed Iran. President Obama stated he was now convinced that  the current course they re on would provide them with nuclear weapons capabilities, though he gave no timeline. He dodged the question of whether he shared Israel s view that a  nuclear capable Iran was as dangerous as one that actually possessed weapons.  I m not going to parse that right now, he said. But he cited the example of North Korea, whose nuclear capabilities were unclear until it conducted a test in 2006, which it followed with a second shortly after Obama took office. Obama was speaking about revamping American nuclear strategy to substantially narrow the conditions under which the United States would use nuclear weapons, with exceptions directed at  outliers like Iran and North Korea that have violated or renounced the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. On March 28, former US ambassador to the UN John Bolton warned of the White House moving towards acceptance of a nuclearly capable Iran.  I very much worry the Obama administration is willing to accept a nuclear Iran, that's why there's this extraordinary pressure on Israel not to attack in Iran, Bolton told Army Radio. On Saturday night, in response to an announcement by Iran s nuclear chief of plans to build new atomic facilities in the country, and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad s newest warning regarding Israel s demise, a senior Israeli government official called for  determined and effective international action.  Ahmadinejad s continuous outbursts of extremist rhetoric only prove to the entire international community the seriousness of the threat posed by the Iranian regime s pursuit of nuclear weapons, and heightens the need for determined and effective international action, the official said. Ahmadinejad, referring on Saturday to escalating tensions in the Gaza Strip, said IDF action would  cost Israel  too much.  I say to the Zionists and their supporters that they have already committed enough crimes, he told an Iranian crowd.  A new adventure in Gaza will not save you, but hasten your demise. Faced with the prospect of new sanctions because of Iran s nuclear defiance, Ahmadinejad said that such penalties would only strengthen his country s technological advancement and help it to become more self-sufficient.  Don t imagine that you can stop Iran s progress, Ahmadinejad said in remarks broadcast live on state television.  The more you reveal your animosity, the more it will increase our people s motivation to double efforts for construction and progress of Iran. The Iranian president claimed US pressure on Iran had backfired and made Washington more isolated in the eyes of the world. China, which has veto power in the UN Security Council and whose support would be key, has not confirmed US reports that it has dropped its opposition to new sanctions. Iran s top nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, is in China in the hopes of winning assurances from Beijing that it will oppose such measures. Iran s economy has suffered over the past year, and parliament approved a cut in subsidies that keep fuel prices low, a further blow to Iranians already experiencing high unemployment and inflation. The UN Security Council could consider new punishments on Iran, including increasing financial squeezes on the extensive holdings of Iran s Revolutionary Guard. The US has also said it could seek to penalize companies that sell fuel to the oil-rich Islamic Republic, which imports about 40 percent of the fuel it needs because its refineries cannot keep pace. Ahmadinejad added that the US has failed to isolate Iran. He said the fact that Obama s recent visit to Afghanistan was not announced beforehand for security reasons was evidence of America s own isolation.  First, let s see who is isolated. We think those who can t show up publicly among the people and directly address them are isolated – those who fear nations. Gentlemen go to a country where they have 60,000 troops without any prior announcement. Who is isolated? Ahmadinejad said. The Iranian president noted that his own recent trip to Afghanistan was announced in advance and said he was warmly received.  You are isolated yourself, but you are a hotheaded and don t understand it, he said.