Israel accuses Iran of having “secret atomic warehouse” near Tehran

Netanyahu did not identify the material he claimed was in the warehouse nor did he specifically say that Iran had violated the nuclear deal.

The Israeli leader regards Iran as the biggest enemy of the Jewish state and has previously made allegations about Tehran’s nuclear activities that are difficult to verify.

In 2012 in a speech to the UN assembly, Netanyahu held up a cartoon drawing of a bomb to dramatize his claim that Tehran was producing a nuclear bomb at the time.

In April, Netanyahu touted what he said was evidence of a large secret archive of documents related to Iran’s clandestine nuclear weapons program at a different site in Tehran.

He said Israeli agents removed vast amounts of documents from that site. At the time, Iran said the documents were fake.

In his latest UN speech, Netanyahu claimed Iran had begun moving items out of the alleged secret warehouse and spreading them around Tehran to hide the evidence.

He said the warehouse still contains some 15 shipping containers full of nuclear-related equipment and materials, however.

Under the nuclear deal, the UN’s atomic watchdog agency has the authority to inspect any site that allegedly houses nuclear materials.

But the International Atomic Agency has repeatedly said its inspections have found Iran was abiding by the restrictions in the deal. It did not immediately comment on Netanyahu’s latest allegations.

While the United States withdrew from the deal in May, France, Britain, Germany, China, and Russia have continued to honor the agreement and have been seeking to provide legal procedures and protections so their businesses can continue to operate in Iran despite U.S. sanctions.

That drew harsh criticism from Netanyahu, who accused Europe of “appeasing Iran.”

“Instead of coddling Iran’s dictators,” other countries should support the sanctions, he said to applause.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that the United States is aware of the facility Netanyahu mentioned and described it as a “warehouse” used to store “records and archives” from Iran’s nuclear program.

Under the terms of the deal, Iran is allowed to keep documents and other research, but the deal puts strict limits on nuclear equipment and materials such as enriched uranium which can be used to make bombs.

The Israeli leader also lambasted Iran’s ballistic missile activity, identifying three locations near Beirut airport where he claimed Iran’s ally, the Lebanese Hizballah militia, is developing precision missiles that could be used to hit Israel.

This article is published courtesy of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty