Speaking after Israel proposed its own terms for the accord, Obama told US radio network NPR yesterday that demands for Iran to recognise the country go beyond the scope of the agreement.
"The notion that we would condition Iran not getting nuclear weapons in a verifiable deal on Iran recognising Israel, is really akin to saying that we won't sign a deal unless the nature of the Iranian regime completely transforms," he said in a drive to sell the deal to a hostile Congress.
Israel's government reacted angrily to the historic framework agreement on Iran's nuclear programme announced last week, with a final accord due by June 30.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu demanded Sunday that Iranian recognition of the Jewish state's right to exist be written into the agreement.
Intelligence minister Yuval Steinitz told journalists yesterday that while an earlier pledge by Obama to back Israel's security was appreciated, it did not outweigh the potential threat of a nuclear-armed Iran.
"If Iran will produce nuclear weapons, this is an existential threat to Israel," Steinitz said.
"Nobody can tell us that backing and assistance are enough to completely resist or to neutralise such a threat."
He also proposed that Tehran detail its past nuclear arms research and allow international inspectors to make spot checks "anywhere, anytime".
If such terms were accepted, Steinitz said, "it will not be a good agreement but it will be a more reasonable agreement".
Under the outline deal, the United States and the European Union are to lift all nuclear-related sanctions on Iran in exchange for a 98-per cent cut in Iran's stocks of highly enriched uranium for 15 years, while its unfinished Arak reactor will not produce weapons-grade plutonium.
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