White House hopeful Mitt Romney on Sunday held top-level talks in Israel about how to handle fears over Iran's nuclear ambitions, on a visit aimed at burnishing his foreign policy credentials.
"Like you, we are very concerned about the development of nuclear capabilities on the part of Iran and feel it is unacceptable for Iran to become a nuclear armed nation," Romney told reporters on meeting President Shimon Peres.
"The threat it would pose to Israel, the region and the world is incomparable and unacceptable."
The Republican challenger, who will face off against President Barack Obama in November's U.S. election, flew in from Britain late on Saturday for a one-day visit expected to focus on Iran's nuclear program, which Israel and much of the West believes is a covert bid to develop atomic weapons.
"Iran and its effort to become a nuclear-capable nation (is one) which I take with great seriousness, and look forward to chatting with you about further actions that we can take to dissuade Iran from their nuclear folly," Romney told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier on Sunday in remarks carried on Israeli public radio.
He also said the two could discuss "developments about the region" including in Syria and Egypt.
Netanyahu told him it was important to have "a strong and credible military threat" because sanctions and diplomacy "so far have not set back the Iranian program by one iota."
"I think it's important to do everything in our power to prevent the Ayatollahs from possessing that capability," he said.
"And that's why I believe that we need a strong and credible military threat, coupled with the sanctions, to have a chance to change that situation."
Romney was also to meet Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad later on Sunday and give a statement on foreign policy.
Romney has consistently attacked what he says is Obama's weak and misguided Middle East policy, saying in January that the Democratic incumbent "threw Israel under the bus," by defining the 1967 borders as a starting point for Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.
He has also charged that Obama's policy towards Iran is too weighted towards engagement with an Israeli enemy with suspected nuclear ambitions, and has vowed tougher sanctions if he is elected.
Obama made a show of support for Israel at the White House on Friday, signing a law reinforcing U.S. security and military cooperation with Israel as representatives of the pro-Israel lobby AIPAC stood next to him in the Oval Office.
Israeli journalists were invited to attend the signing along with photographers and reporters accredited to the White House. Such signing ceremonies have been uncommon in the Obama presidency.
The law, which gives Israel preferential access to U.S. arms and munitions, "underscores our unshakable commitment to Israel's security," Obama said.
Israel is widely believed to have the Middle East's only, albeit undeclared, nuclear arsenal, which international experts believe contains between 100 and 300 nuclear warheads.
On Sunday, Israeli daily Haaretz reported that U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon had briefed Netanyahu on Washington's contingency plans for a pre-emptive strike on Iran's nuclear facilities.
Citing a senior U.S. official, the paper said Donilon met Netanyahu for three hours over dinner in Jerusalem two weeks ago and shared with him details of U.S. military capabilities for attacking Iranian bunkers.
"Donilon sought to make clear that the United States is seriously preparing for the possibility that negotiations will reach a dead end and military action will become necessary," Haaretz wrote.
Israeli officials did not formally confirm or deny the report.
"We don't comment on what is discussed in closed diplomatic meetings," one official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
"But the story is full of factual errors."
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