Europe must take a firmer line with Iran over its controversial nuclear program, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday at the start of a working meeting with EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton.
"We need to exert pressure on them. We're not talking about political spin but about the spinning of centrifuges," he said in remarks communicated by his office.
"It must stop and I think it is up to Europe to join the United States and Israel and all the other elements in the international community in demanding a halt to Iran's nuclear program," he said in what appeared to be a rebuke.
Ashton's visit comes just six days after the election of moderate Hassan Rowhani as Iran's new president in what analysts have said could sooth tensions with the West over Tehran's nuclear program.
But Israel has refused to be mollified, with Netanyahu earlier this week warning the world not to "be tempted to ease pressure on Iran."
In response, Ashton acknowledged the importance of consulting with Netanyahu about the situation in Iran after the elections, the premier's office said.
"The real test regarding the elections in Iran will be if Iran changes its policy and stops enriching uranium, removes the nuclear material and closes the illegal nuclear facility at Qom," Netanyahu said.
Iran has been slapped with successive rounds of U.N. Security Council sanctions and also unilateral measures by the European Union and the United States.
The sanctions initially only targeted the nuclear and defense industries but have now started to hurt the wider economy, causing concern among ordinary Iranians and even the leadership.
Netanyahu and Ashton were also to discuss U.S. peace efforts in a meeting which comes the day after she met Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas in Ramallah.
Netanyahu said that a renewal of direct negotiations without preconditions was "the right thing to do" and insisted on Israel's willingness to start immediately. "I hope that president Abbas is also ready," he said.
Direct talks broke down just weeks after they were started in September 2010 in a dispute over settlements.
A Palestinian demand that Israel freeze settlement construction and accept the 1967 lines as the basis for negotiations before resuming direct talks has been rejected by Israel as an unacceptable "precondition."
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who arrives in the region next week for his fifth visit since February, has been locked in an intensive bout of shuttle diplomacy in the hope of achieving a breakthrough, although there is no evidence of such so far.
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