JERUSALEM, April 8 (Xinhua) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has 
decided to cancel a planned trip to Washington for a U.S.-hosted nuclear 
security summit, local daily Ha'aretz quoted government officials as saying on 
Thursday night.Netanyahu was originally scheduled to travel to the United 
States on Monday and join over 40 national leaders at the conference, called by 
U.S. President Barack Obama and aimed to set up a mechanism preventing nuclear 
weapons from reaching dangerous hands.However, out of concerns that a group of 
Muslim states, led by Egypt and Turkey, would demand at the summit that Israel 
sign the international Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), Netanyhu decided 
to cancel the trip and send Intelligence and Atomic Energy Minister Dan Meridor 
instead, according to the report.A senior government official was citing as 
saying that Israel was "disappointed" with developments in the run-up to the 
conference. "The nuclear security
 summit is supposed to be about dealing with the danger of nuclear terror. 
Israel is a part of that effort," added the unnamed official.The Jewish state 
is among only a few countries that are not party to the NPT, and is expected to 
the only Mideast country in possession of nuclear weapons. Yet Israel abides by 
a policy of " nuclear ambiguity," neither confirming nor denying the 
assumption.Meanwhile, Israel has long been accusing Iran, perceived as its 
archfoe, of secretly developing nuclear weapons and thus posing an existential 
threat to Israel, and has been urging the international community to impose 
crippling sanctions upon the Islamic republic. It also has refused to rule out 
the possibility of launching military attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities.Iran 
has firmly denied the accusation, insisting that its nuclear program is purely 
for peaceful purposes.
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