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Friday, 6 April 2012

Netanyahu slams poet who likened Israel, Iran

Netanyahu slams poet who likened Israel, Iran

By Daniella Cheslow
Associated Press

JERUSALEM - Israel's prime minister lambasted German poet and Nobel Prize laureate Guenter Grass on Thursday for saying Israel is a threat to world peace and for calling for international oversight of both Israeli and Iranian nuclear facilities.

Grass, 84, published a poem in a German newspaper on Wednesday in which he questioned how Israel could call for ending Iran's nuclear program while holding what is widely believed to be its own atomic arsenal.

Grass said he wrote the poem, titled "What Must Be Said," after Berlin sold Israel submarines that could launch nuclear warheads and that could potentially be used in an attack on Iran. He noted that for years he resisted criticizing Israel's nuclear program for fear of being labeled an anti-Semite.

In the poem, published in the Sueddeutsche Zeitung and Italy's La Repubblica, among others, Grass said "the nuclear power Israel is endangering the already fragile world peace."

He also called for "unhindered and permanent control of Israel's nuclear capability and Iran's atomic facilities through an international body."

Benjamin Netanyahu blasted Grass for comparing Israel to Iran.

"Guenter Grass' shameful moral equivalence between Israel and Iran, a regime that denies the Holocaust and threatens to annihilate Israel, says little about Israel and much about Mr. Grass," Netanyahu said.

He also noted that Grass, late in his career, admitted to serving in the Nazi Waffen SS.

"So for him to cast the one and only Jewish state as the greatest threat to world peace and to oppose giving Israel the means to defend itself is perhaps not surprising," the Israeli leader added.

Israel has never confirmed it has nuclear weapons, preferring a policy of nuclear ambiguity. In 1986, technician Mordechai Vanunu carried hundreds of pictures he took of the Israeli nuclear reactor out of the country and gave them to the London Sunday Times. From his photos and information, experts concluded Israel had hundreds of nuclear bombs.

Israel has also ignored calls to join the nonproliferation treaty, which requires members to open nuclear facilities to inspection and to disarm.

Tehran claims its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, but Israel and the West believe it is pursuing atomic weapons. Israel has threatened military action if international sanctions and diplomacy fail to curb Iran's nuclear ambitions.

Grass established himself as a leading literary figure with The Tin Drum, published in 1959, and won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1999. He urged fellow Germans to confront their painful Nazi history in the decades after World War II. He acknowledged his SS service in a 2006 autobiography.

Info: http://www.philly.com/philly/news/nation_world/146379915.html?imageId=70767015

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