Kerry: Israel, Egypt, Saudis Pushed US to Bomb Iran Before Nuke Deal

Pictured Above: Then-U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (right) sits with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as they address reporters June 27, 2016, at the U.S. Ambassador's Residence in Rome, Italy. Credit: U.S. State Department.

(JNS.org) Former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Tuesday that Israel, Egypt and Saudi Arabia encouraged the U.S. to “bomb Iran” before the 2015 nuclear deal was brokered by the Obama administration and other world powers.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was “genuinely agitating towards action,” before the deal was finalized, said Kerry during the Ignatius Forum in Washington D.C.  

Kerry also stated that during his tenure as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that Saudi King Abdullah, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Netanyahu all pushed for military action against Iran.

“Each of them said to me, you have to bomb Iran, it’s the only thing they are going to understand,” said Kerry.

“Without exaggeration, the likelihood is very high that we would have been in a conflict,” without brokering a nuclear agreement with Iran, he said.

Kerry also criticized President Donald Trump for his calls to fix the nuclear deal, stating that Trump had “polluted the water” by questioning the agreement, and that Trump’s criticism of the accord was “a blatant over-simplistic political appeal to the American Jewish community.”

In fulfilling one of his key campaign pledges, Trump announced in October that he had decertified the Iranian nuclear deal as part of a new and tougher approach towards the Islamic Republic. Trump also blamed former President Barack Obama for lifting sanctions on Iran right before “what would have been the total collapse of the Iranian regime.”