Israel's statement, distributed today to a global conference on a landmark disarmament treaty, is the country's first public comment since it showed up as a surprise observer. Israel has never publicly declared its nuclear weapons, and it is not a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
As an observer nation, it cannot address the ongoing conference, where many countries have expressed frustration that a key meeting toward a Middle East nuclear weapons-free zone, promised for 2012, has not taken place. That goal was set the last time the conference met five years ago.
Both countries this week urged progress, with Russia expressing its "grave dissatisfaction" at the delay and Secretary of State John Kerry calling the proposed zone an "ambitious goal and fraught with challenges" but worth pursuing.
And Iran, which Israel has loudly protested over its nuclear program, this week has used the stalled zone as a chance to fire back.
Speaking on behalf of more than 100 mostly developing countries, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif on Monday called for Israel to give up its nuclear weapons, saying they are a regional threat.
The statement notes that the consultations were "the first direct engagement between Israel and its neighbors on this issue in over 20 years."
Israel "responded positively" to invitations by a Finnish facilitator in October and January of this year for a sixth round of consultations, but they were postponed several times and didn't take place, the statement says.
"Ultimately, it is difficult to understand how any disarmament, arms control and regional security issues can be addressed without any direct dialogue between the regional states, as the Group of Arab States suggests.
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