
 Prime Minister  Binyamin Netanyahu sounded an urgent note regarding the Iranian threat in a  Monday interview on America's ABC network, saying that “we have a lot less time  with each day that passes.”
“And the crucial thing,” he said, “is to use  the time available for forceful international action led by the United States.  If you can, go through the [UN] Security Council. If you can't, go outside the  Security Council.” 
“I spoke with President Obama when he was Senator  Obama,” he said on the morning news show, Good Morning America. “He visited  Israel. And I was the leader of the Opposition at… that time. And I said… if he  gets elected President... all the issues that will flood his desk will one day  be pushed aside by one overriding issue. And that is if Iran attempts to develop  atomic bombs. Because they could very well either use it or threaten to use it  or threaten to give it to terrorists or even give them a crude device with  fissionable material that can be put in a container ship. And this could come to  Manhattan or to any port in the United States or in Europe or, for that matter,  in Israel.” 
'A minimal  requirement'
The international community can deliver “crippling  sanctions” against Iran, he said. “If you stop … Iran from importing refined  petroleum, that's a fancy word for gasoline,” Netanyahu explained, “then Iran  simply doesn't have refining capacity and this regime comes to a halt. I think  that's crippling sanctions. Now if the UN Security Council doesn't pass it  because they'll dilute the resolution to get acquiescence of their members, then  certainly the United States and other willing partners in the international  community can... enforce these sanctions outside the Security Council. There is  a way to deliver these crippling sanctions. This should be done now.” 
“I  think this is a minimal requirement right now,” he added. The point was “not  really to send [Iran] messages," he said, “but to actually make this regime  begin to make choices. Because right now they feel they don't have to make  choices. They understand that the spotlight is on them but they're not doing  anything. And the critical thing is I think there's an understanding in  Washington, certainly in Jerusalem and quite a few other capitals in the world,  that very forceful action has to be taken to make Iran stop. I think the future  of peace in the world and of stability and security is at stake.” 
Asked  if he was worried that war could break out this summer, the prime minister said:  “If it's up to us, there won't be any war." Iran, he added, is trying to create  tensions through Hizbullah, “probably to deflect the world's attention from  Iran's advancement and its plan to develop nuclear weapons.”