Jeffrey Goldberg, Columnist

Israel Pushed Iran to the Table, Says Hagel

Hagel, now in his ninth month leading the Pentagon, argued that Netanyahu’s threats of military action against Iran’s nuclear sites, combined with the pressure of sanctions, may have actually encouraged its leader to take negotiations seriously.
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Last week, Secretary of State John Kerry, the Obama administration's most fervent supporter of nuclear negotiations with Iran, said in a speech that the U.S. would "not succumb to those fear tactics and forces that suggest" it is wrong to even test Iran's willingness to make nuclear concessions.

This statement, made at an event sponsored by the Ploughshares Fund, a group that opposes nuclear proliferation but which sometimes seems overly relaxed about the danger of a nuclear Iran, was generally understood to have been a brushback pitch thrown at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has been arguing that the American administration, and its European allies, are walking into a trap of Iran's devising.