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Netanyahu Supports A 'Syrian Model' for Iran

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would gladly embrace employing a military threat to convince Tehran to halt its nuclear program.   
U.S. President Barack Obama meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, September 30, 2013.      REUTERS/Jason Reed  (UNITED STATES - Tags: POLITICS) - RTR3FG0U
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The Israeli party pooper arrived in Washington, walked into the White House and seemed to have learned some manners and etiquette in the interim. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has shown that you can still change after turning 60. After all, he was responsible for the horror show with US President Barack Obama at the White House when he gave the American president a learned and reproachful tirade in front of the media. This traumatic event, which took place in 2009 at their first meeting during the first term of both leaders, has been dubbed “The Lecture” in the United States. Obama must have felt the way President Bill Clinton felt after his first meeting with Netanyahu in 1996.

But this is 2013, and Obama and Netanyahu have built a certain kind of trust. The Israeli premier was careful on Sept. 30 to show reverence toward the American president, emphasizing their points of agreement while elegantly glossing over the moot issues. He was careful not to be a wet blanket on Obama’s party, especially with fallout over the US federal budget expected the next day, an issue of much greater interest to the American president and public than the centrifuges in Natanz

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