JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned that Iran would have "a price 
to pay" if it doesn't back down from its nuclear ambitions, hinting broadly that 
Israel might be forced to take action - his strongest words yet about the 
Iranian threat. 
Talking to reporters Thursday on his way home from a three-day trip to 
Moscow, Olmert didn't specifically threaten to cripple Iran's nuclear program in 
a military strike, as Israel did 25 years ago in Iraq when it sent combat planes 
to destroy an unfinished nuclear reactor. But he repeated what he said a day 
earlier after meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow - the 
Iranians "have to be afraid" of the consequences of their intransigence.
 
 
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    Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert gestures during a meeting 
 with the families of soldiers serving in the Israeli armed forces, Moscow, 
 Thursday, Oct. 19, 2006. [AP] 
  | 
"They have to understand that if they object to every compromise, there will 
be a price to pay," Olmert said.
Israel rejects Tehran's claim that its nuclear program is peaceful, designed 
solely to produce energy. In the past, Israel has said it would not lead a 
campaign against Iran's nuclear program, rather act in concert with world powers 
that are similarly worried about Iran's intentions.
But with Iran rejecting various compromise proposals and insisting on 
enriching uranium - a process key to developing nuclear weapons - 
Olmert has been raising the stakes with increasingly defiant rhetoric.
Israel cannot reconcile itself to a nuclear Iran, he said - and "there 
comes a time when you have to do damage control."
"A red line must be drawn that cannot be crossed," he said, without 
specifying what that line was.
"Time isn't standing still," he added, "and perhaps there will be a need to 
do something in the future."
Though some Israeli officials have made specific threats to hit Iran, 
military experts have questioned Israel's ability to destroy Iran's nuclear 
facilities, which, unlike Iraq's in 1981, are scattered among installations, 
with some of them hidden underground. But they have said Israel could set the 
program back years by striking several of the sites.
Israel considers Iran to be the greatest threat to its survival. Iran's 
president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has repeatedly called for the Jewish state's 
destruction, and Iran already has missiles capable of carrying payloads to 
Israel.
Russia is building Iran's first nuclear reactor and has impeded UN sanctions 
against Tehran. It has also agreed to resume shipment of fuel for the reactor, 
which experts say could be diverted and used to build bombs.
After meeting for four hours with Putin and Russian defense officials, Olmert 
said he was convinced they understood the gravity of the situation and don't 
want to see a nuclear Iran. But at a news conference with Olmert at the Kremlin 
on Wednesday, Putin pointedly made no mention of the Iranian nuclear standoff.
On the plane, Olmert also reiterated his willingness to meet with the 
moderate Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, to try to jump-start long-stalled 
peace talks. But he said he would not agree ahead of the meeting to release some 
of the thousands of Palestinian prisoners Israel holds - a gesture Abbas 
seeks to prove the meeting will yield concrete results for him.
Israel won't agree to release Palestinian prisoners until Hamas-linked 
militants free an Israeli soldier they captured nearly four months ago, he said.
"The moment of truth with the Palestinians is closer than ever," Olmert said. 
With the Palestinian Hamas-led government holding fast to its militantly 
anti-Israeli stance, Olmert said, Abbas "must take brave steps, or he and we 
will lose what remains of our hope."